No one in psychology will agree on the terms, like that's the priggest problems. Language is the hardest part of all this. And until you can define belief, it's difficult to articulate the idea. It's difficult to build a model from that and then make science happen. Here's the last thing i'l say that ie rally, got to go. Ba, her, we go. Back to Mail Online home. Back to the page you came from.
In this episode we sit down with neuroscientist David Eagleman to learn how brains turn noise into signal, chaos into order, electrical spikes into meaning, and how new technology can expand subjective reality in ways never before possible.
In his new book, Livewired, Eagleman explores how brains come into the world "half baked" so they can create reality itself out of the inputs and experiences available. And now, thanks to that plug-and-play plasticity, with the latest tools, not only can we return senses to people who've lost them, but we can add to any brain senses we can't imagine.
Show notes at: www.youarenotsosmart.com
Patreon: http://patreon.com/youarenotsosmart