i'm always crystal clear on who my audience is. My audience is me when i was much younger, and didn't know that word tohow im talking to you. So instead of imagining necessary who this amorphous audience is, just see yourself at a different time in your life. I like it exactly. And if that young person would think, oh, my god, that's the goolest ing ever heard. I had no idea, then then you're there. He hit the bull's eye. Great. Who is the communicator that you admire and why? You know, for me it was, it was karl sagin ah, because he spoke so genuinely passionately
In this episode of Think Fast, Talk Smart, lecturer and podcast host Matt Abrahams sits down with David Eagleman, a neuroscientist and the host of the PBS series The Brain, to discuss why our brains are wired for storytelling and how new senses might impact our connection and communication with others. “I’ve always been really interested in this idea of how we can pass information to the brain via unusual channels," Eagleman says. "We’ve got our eyes or ears or fingertips and our nose, we’re very used to this and we sort of think these are fundamental, but of course, this is just what we’ve inherited from a long road of evolution... It turns out you can push information in the brain in other ways.”
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