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 ›
joshua-fuller-ZWZDQVpmfIY-unsplash Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date April 8, 2025 CategoriesAnatomyMedicineNeuroscience & Mind Tagged , alien hand syndrome, antiseizure medications, biotechnology, brain, Broca’s area, consciousness, corpus callosotomy, corpus callosum, Gonzalo Munevar, Hannah Thomasy, hemispheres, language, Lawrence Technical University, Michael Egnor, neuroscientists, Nobel Prize, Roger Sperry, sci-fi, Severance (sci-fi series), split-brain patients, split-brain syndrome, 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 ›