low-angle-shot-in-the-operating-room-assistant-hands-out-ins-217273455-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author John Zmirak Date September 2, 2025 CategoriesMedicineNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , abstract thought, Alice Cronin-Golomb, atheism, brain, brain surgery, brain tumor, Christianity, concepts, Denyse O’Leary, hemispheres, left frontal lobe, materialism, medicine, Michael Egnor, mind, MIT, morality, music, near-death experiences, Netherlands, neuroscience, neurosurgeons, Nobel Prize, painting, reason, Roger Sperry, seizures, soul, split-brain surgery, surgery, The Immortal Mind, thoughts, violin, Wilder Penfield, Yair Pinto Conversation with Dr. Egnor: Abstract Thought Comes from the Mind, Not the Brain John Zmirak September 2, 2025 Medicine, Neuroscience & Mind 7 We can cut perceptional abilities with a knife, but we can’t cut reason and abstract thought. Read More ›
Wilder_Penfield_plaque_Montreal Type post Author Michael Egnor Date April 2, 2025 CategoriesMedicineNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , abstract thought, awake patients, brain, brain cortex, brain networks, brain stimulations, brain surgery, Christof Koch, Denyse O'Leary, electrical probe, fMRI studies, Integrated information theory, memories, mind, neuronal activation, neuroscience, Robert J. Marks II, The Immortal Mind, Wilder Penfield Debating the Legacy of Neuroscientist Wilder Penfield Michael Egnor April 2, 2025 Medicine, Neuroscience & Mind 4 How much more evidence is necessary to draw the scientific inference that activation of brain networks is insufficient to generate abstract thought? Read More ›
La_salle_d'opération_du_Dr._Hingston_v2 Type post Author Michael Egnor Date February 20, 2025 CategoriesMedicineNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , brain, brain surgery, Cornell University, illusion, Justine Sergent, neuroscience, personality, Psyche, religions, scalpel, selfhood, soul, split-brain surgery, Yair Pinto Split-Brain Surgeries Reveal Reality of the Soul Michael Egnor February 20, 2025 Medicine, Neuroscience & Mind 4 This is not only the perennial teaching of the great religions, but the evidence of the best neuroscience. Read More ›
Antidote to Despair Type post Author Ann Gauger Date December 24, 2020 CategoriesBioethicsBiologyFaith & Science Tagged , abortion, adult home care, Africans, brain surgery, chemotherapy, despair, DSHS, friendship, government aid, hematoma, homeless shelter, hospital, immigrants, Medicaid, pregnancy, racial hierarchy, Racism, rape, scientific racism, Section 8, subsidized housing, trust, WIC #9 Story of 2020: An Antidote to Despair Ann Gauger December 24, 2020 Bioethics, Biology, Faith & Science 9 I am a biologist, a worker in a field with a sorrowful history of categorizing human beings by race. Read More ›
john-towner-3Kv48NS4WUU-unsplash Type post Author Ann Gauger Date June 9, 2020 CategoriesBioethicsBiology Tagged , abortion, adult home care, Africans, brain surgery, chemotherapy, despair, DSHS, friendship, government aid, hematoma, homeless shelter, hospital, immigrants, Medicaid, pregnancy, racial hierarchy, Racism, rape, scientific racism, Section 8, subsidized housing, trust, WIC An Antidote to Despair Ann Gauger June 9, 2020 Bioethics, Biology 9 I am a biologist, a worker in a field with a sorrowful history of categorizing human beings by race, arranging them in a false hierarchy. Read More ›