Immortal-Mind-Social-Media-Graphics-1920x1080px-No-Button Type post Author Michael Egnor Date June 3, 2025 CategoriesAnatomyMedicineNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , bone, brain, consciousness, corpus callosotomy, Denyse O'Leary, epilepsy, legs, Michael Egnor, mind, neuroscience, neurosurgery, seizures, skull, split-brain surgery, surgery New Book, The Immortal Mind, Out Today — The Brain Can Be Split, but Not the Mind Michael Egnor and Denyse O’Leary June 3, 2025 Anatomy, Medicine, Neuroscience & Mind 4 Even when the brain is split in half, many important aspects of the mind remain unified. Thus, the mind is something that the brain isn’t. Read More ›
joshua-fuller-ZWZDQVpmfIY-unsplash Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date April 8, 2025 CategoriesAnatomyMedicineNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , alien hand syndrome, biotechnology, brain, consciousness, corpus callosotomy, corpus callosum, hemispheres, language, Michael Egnor, neuroscientists, Nobel Prize, Roger Sperry, sci-fi, split-brain patients, The Immortal Mind, The Scientist One Brain, Two Consciousnesses? Denyse O’Leary April 8, 2025 Anatomy, Medicine, Neuroscience & Mind 6 The idea that split-brain surgery can create two separate minds is immortal — in science fiction. Read More ›