The Lectures
Lecture 1: Phantoms in the Brain
Scientists need no longer be afraid to ask the big questions about what it means to be human with empirical evidence now answering ancient philosophical questions about meaning and existence.
Lecture 2: Synapses and the Self
How does the activity of the 100 billion little wisps of protoplasm - the neurons in your brain - give rise to all the richness of our conscious experience, including the "redness" of red, the painfulness of pain or the exquisite flavour of Marmite or Vindaloo?
Lecture 3: The Artful Brain
Professor Ramachandran draws on neurological case studies and work from ethology (animal behavior) to present a new framework for understanding how the brain creates and responds to art. He will use examples mainly from Indian art and Cubism to illustrate these ideas.
Lecture 4: Purple Numbers and Sharp Cheese
Professor Ramachandran demonstrates experimentally that the phenomenon of synesthaesia is a genuine sensory effect. For example, some subjects literally "see" red every time they see the number 5 or green when they see 2.
Lecture 5: Neuroscience - the New Philosophy
Professor Ramachandran argues that neuroscience, perhaps more than any other discipline, is capable of transforming man's understanding of himself and his place in the cosmos.
Offering multiple perspectives from many fields of human inquiry that may move all of us toward a more integrated understanding of who we are as conscious beings.
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Monday, November 30, 2009
BBC: The Emerging Mind (2003 Conference Lectures)
These lectures were given as part of the BBC's Emerging Mind Conference in 2003. Still interesting stuff. You can also read/print the individual lectures by clicking the links.
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