The Michael Shermer Show

What Makes You "You" When Everything Is Just Atoms?

49 snips
Jan 6, 2026
Nikolay Kukushkin, a neuroscientist and author of "One Hand Clapping," delves into the intricate nature of consciousness. He discusses how even simple cells exhibit memory, challenging the notion that human mind is merely a collection of neurons. Kukushkin explores the evolutionary advantages of complexity, the dominance of bacteria, and how memory and abstraction drive thought. He wonders why we feel unique despite being made of the same atoms as everything else, linking the mystery of self to the continuum of consciousness in living organisms.
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ANECDOTE

Growing Up With State Lies

  • Kukushkin recounts living under Russian state media where people accepted falsehoods as normal.
  • That experience shaped his concern about truth dissolution in modern politics.
INSIGHT

Self Is A Pattern, Not A Soul

  • The feeling of being uniquely "you" arises from patterns of information, not a mystical soul.
  • The border between self and world dissolves when you zoom in on biological processes.
INSIGHT

Mind As Software On Biological Hardware

  • Consciousness is generated by information patterns (software) running on neurons (hardware).
  • Reducing mind to "just neurons" misses the functional informational level that matters.
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