The Human Risk Podcast

Dr Nicholas Wright on How the Brain Shapes War and War Shapes The Brain

Nov 1, 2025
Dr. Nicholas Wright, a neurologist-turned-neuroscientist and advisor to the Pentagon, dives into the interplay between the brain and warfare. He reveals how fear is essential for survival and why the will to fight can trump superior military strength. Exploring perception as a controlled hallucination, Wright discusses how our neural systems shape understanding and decision-making. He emphasizes the importance of wisdom in leadership and the role of deception in strategy. Drawing from historical conflicts, he argues for cognitive diversity in decision-making.
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INSIGHT

Brains Designed For Survival

  • Human brains are built to survive and win fights because our ancestors faced life-and-death threats.
  • That survival wiring shapes modern decisions in business, family, and leadership.
INSIGHT

Fear Is Functional Not Just Harmful

  • Fear is a necessary, functional system that protects individuals from harm.
  • Removing fear doesn't create fearless criminals; it makes people more vulnerable.
ANECDOTE

Will To Fight Beats Bigger Forces

  • The French in 1940 had more tanks and planes but lost because their will to fight collapsed.
  • By contrast, Ukrainians in 2022 fought despite peacetime normality and external training.
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