The brain myth that won’t die | Lisa Feldman Barrett

This interview is an episode from ‪@The-Well‬, our publication about ideas that inspire a life well-lived, created with the ‪@JohnTempletonFoundation‬.
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Watch Lisa Feldman Barrett’s next interview ► • The neuroscience of tr...
Plato famously described the human psyche as two horses and a charioteer: One horse represented instincts, the other represented emotions, and the charioteer was the rational mind that controlled them. Astronomer Carl Sagan continued this idea of a three-layer, “triune brain” in his 1977 book The Dragons of Eden.
But leading neuroscientist Lisa Feldman Barrett challenges this idea of the brain evolving in three layers, instead revealing a common brain plan shared by all mammals and vertebrates. The development of sensory systems led to the emergence of the brain, and hunting and predation may have initiated an arms race to become more efficient and powerful predators.
Despite advances in neuroscience and genetics, the question of why the brain evolved remains elusive. But Feldman Barrett’s fascinating exploration of the brain’s evolution offers insights into the most important functions of this complex organ, and invites us to think more deeply about the origins of our own intelligence.
0:00 What a brain costs
0:21 The triune brain (aka lizard brain) theory
1:24 Plato, Carl Sagan, and the making of the myth
2:35 Debunking the ‘lizard brain’ theory
3:39 How the first brain evolved
5:49 The brain’s ultimate job
Read the video transcript ► bigthink.com/the-well/the-evo...
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About Lisa Feldman Barrett:
Dr. Lisa Feldman Barrett is among the top 1% most-cited scientists in the world, having published over 250 peer-reviewed scientific papers. Dr. Barrett is a University Distinguished Professor of psychology at Northeastern University with appointments at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital, where she is Chief Science Officer for the Center for Law, Brain & Behavior. She is the recipient of a NIH Director’s Pioneer Award for transformative research, a Guggenheim Fellowship in neuroscience, the Mentor Award for Lifetime Achievement from the Association for Psychological Science (APS) and from the Society for Affect Science (SAS), and the Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award from the American Psychological Association (APA). She is an elected fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the Royal Society of Canada, and a number of other honorific societies. She is the author of How Emotions are Made: The Secret Life of the Brain, and more recently, Seven and a Half Lessons About the Brain.
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Пікірлер: 1 100

  • @dianelipson5420
    @dianelipson5420 Жыл бұрын

    Predation certainly nurtured it, but I think even early multi cell creatures with proto eyes started the path to evolving the brain. The enteric nervous system had already been around a while, and gee I’d like to see that discussed more.

  • @bigthink

    @bigthink

    Жыл бұрын

    Good point! There was a lot of evolution at very small scales for things like controlling digestion or perhaps sensing environmental threats before the 'arms race' that began about 500 million years ago. Here's a neat diagram that goes into the evolution from microorganisms: www.scientificamerican.com/article/your-brain-evolved-from-bacteria/ And a little more detail from Feldman Barrett: www.discovermagazine.com/the-sciences/why-did-we-evolve-brains-in-the-first-place

  • @BR.

    @BR.

    Жыл бұрын

    I ❤ U guys!

  • @dianelipson5420

    @dianelipson5420

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bigthink thank you very much. Much appreciated!

  • @correlolelo

    @correlolelo

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly, and those "primitive" sensory organs were also nurtured bij predation. Early multicellular life needed these organs to escape predators and locate food (predation also applies to heterotrophs eating autotrophs).

  • @correlolelo

    @correlolelo

    Жыл бұрын

    Next to predation i think general environment was a big part in developing sensory organs. Even single-celled life has ways to escape environments that contain toxins to them.

  • @pcdm43145
    @pcdm43145 Жыл бұрын

    Interesting... I always thought "lizard brain" was just a metaphor for what we would consider our basest, most primal animal urges and instincts.

  • @stevezelaznik5872

    @stevezelaznik5872

    Жыл бұрын

    Big Think gets amazing guests and then gives these ridiculous click bait titles

  • @kte8552

    @kte8552

    Жыл бұрын

    Same tbh didn't know people meant in a literal sense until now.

  • @1IGG

    @1IGG

    Жыл бұрын

    What's next? Butterflies not containing butter? What's it called again if one takes everything literal..

  • @tfat00

    @tfat00

    Жыл бұрын

    Same here

  • @mkn.567

    @mkn.567

    Жыл бұрын

    same. never thought it suggested a literal vestigial lizard brain

  • @s3.14dervision
    @s3.14dervision Жыл бұрын

    I always assumed "lizard brain" was just shorthand or metaphor to refer to an older, more primitive part of the brain. I didn't realize some people were taking it literally and that it had become canon...🤣🤔🤯

  • @kated3165

    @kated3165

    Жыл бұрын

    There are snake breeders who actually believe this sort of stuff, and use it to excuse giving their animals 0 enrichment or ability to make choices throughout their lives. ''They don't have thoughts, emotions, and can't learn... they run on pure instincts!'' I mean... yeah no kidding your snake will seem brain-dead when it lives in a barren box, unable to do anything ever, and has no brain stimulation in the slightest.

  • @raminwinroth

    @raminwinroth

    Жыл бұрын

    No that metaphor is the myth that is debunked in the video namely that one somehow a lizard's brain is more primitive and two that some older brain that we humans have is from lizards.

  • @wiwlarue4097

    @wiwlarue4097

    Жыл бұрын

    Using the definition on people who are on top of us who make their luxurious living on us is a faulty idea, since these ppl are above us, squeezing every drop of life out of us common folks, designing our future; engineering society however bad that is for us. Being able to control this many humans speaks about more intelligence than just flight or fight. Life is beautiful but it's not fair at all. It is cruel sometimes and the world wasn't founded on compassion either.

  • @StanHowse

    @StanHowse

    Жыл бұрын

    It is, I think she's just an idiot. I've never heard of someone actually thinking that's physically how it goes in the brain, like before we get to be Kids, as babies we would still have a "Lizard Brain". That's not how anyone thinks, Ma'am.

  • @bumblebaa2327

    @bumblebaa2327

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't think they do and I don't think it has. I fervently hope so. Because that take hinders a nice talk about this topic very much. Anyway gotta run, bake in the sun, catch some bugs.

  • @Thezuule1
    @Thezuule1 Жыл бұрын

    Sea Squirts are born with a brain, they use it to find a nice place to live where they attach themselves, and then they proceed to digest their brain, spine, and eyes because they don't need them anymore. This was something that I always found interesting.

  • @EonSound

    @EonSound

    Жыл бұрын

    That's crazy. Similar to suicide yet they still live.

  • @herseem

    @herseem

    Жыл бұрын

    That's stunning

  • @johnriley9897

    @johnriley9897

    Жыл бұрын

    Ok what??? That is incredible! I need to look that up!

  • @s.z.9579

    @s.z.9579

    Жыл бұрын

    That really much describes the way of life for many people, who get stuck in their social media bubble.

  • @paulkurilecz4209

    @paulkurilecz4209

    Жыл бұрын

    Domestic cats do something similar as they grow into adult cats they will get rid of their excess neurons that are not being used. That is, they are born with more neurons than they will have as adult cats.

  • @jameshicks7125
    @jameshicks7125 Жыл бұрын

    Maybe I happened to get exposed to the correct neuroscience, but I always thought of the triune brain as a metaphor to help memorize where basic behavioral and perceptual functioning occurs.

  • @jobinFOG

    @jobinFOG

    Жыл бұрын

    @hanskrieger4299should be top comment

  • @bumblebaa2327

    @bumblebaa2327

    Жыл бұрын

    @hanskrieger4299 wut? dragonflies aren't dragons?

  • @caviramus0993

    @caviramus0993

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@hanskrieger4299 Actually mammals did not evolve from reptiles.

  • @user-ld9tf4td8s

    @user-ld9tf4td8s

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@hanskrieger4299dinosaurs are reptiles. And so are mammals btw

  • @jeremiahsymonette4781

    @jeremiahsymonette4781

    8 ай бұрын

    It absolutely is. These people are just not as smart as they think they are

  • @mattsreptileroom
    @mattsreptileroom Жыл бұрын

    Im a reptile keeper and enthusiast. Ive got 30 snakes and 5 geckos. Im not gonna pretend theyre on the level of a dog or human. But there is much more going on up there than what is traditionally believed. You don't survive for 100 million years virtually unchanged if you're a big old dummy. And they react differently to different people, They recognize their owner versus a stranger, and learn from past experience. And some of them you looking in their eyes and you can tell that the wheels are turning, that they are figuring things out. Glad to see that this myth of the reptile brain is finally being debunked in the mainstream, It's 150-year-old theory that was invented by a guy who believed humans were not animals, and worked backwards from that conclusion. We need to start giving animals the respect they deserve because viewing them as these beings wholly dependent on instinct is doing us and them a great disservice

  • @bulbousdude

    @bulbousdude

    Жыл бұрын

    Very well said!

  • @martthesling

    @martthesling

    Жыл бұрын

    😅

  • @insankamil2909

    @insankamil2909

    8 ай бұрын

    what do we do if animal can speak(just really speak(for thought) as toddler would surprising) and then do farm(some animal do simple farm) ?

  • @willtheprodigy3819

    @willtheprodigy3819

    18 күн бұрын

    Lizard brain just means our base instincts.

  • @ForAnAngel
    @ForAnAngel Жыл бұрын

    I would like to hear more about those brainless "stomach on a stick" animals. They sounded fascinating.

  • @josephvisnovsky1462

    @josephvisnovsky1462

    Жыл бұрын

    Lancelets, of the family amphioxus.

  • @bikebudha01

    @bikebudha01

    Жыл бұрын

    You can find out everything you need to know about Amphiouxus, just go to your nearest trump rally.... They'll be wearing red hats...

  • @akshayde

    @akshayde

    Жыл бұрын

    I feel called out!

  • @LowestofheDead

    @LowestofheDead

    Жыл бұрын

    Imagine studying so many brains as a neuroscientist, and getting so tired of it... that your favourite animal has no brain at all

  • @leogama3422

    @leogama3422

    Жыл бұрын

    swimming worms basically

  • @scottmichaelhedge5055
    @scottmichaelhedge5055 Жыл бұрын

    "They're just little stomachs on a stick." I took that personally.

  • @cedricburkhart3738

    @cedricburkhart3738

    Жыл бұрын

    What are you a worm?

  • @charleshagen1143

    @charleshagen1143

    Жыл бұрын

    stomachs on a stick. coming soon to a State Fair near you!

  • @StanHowse

    @StanHowse

    Жыл бұрын

    Well, cause Cows are out here solving Math problems, right?

  • @terramater
    @terramater Жыл бұрын

    That's so interesting! Our crew recently portraited the sperm whale brain, which is the biggest within the animal kingdom. And it's so fascinating to see how this plays a big role not only in genetic evolution but also in cultural evolution, which made them able to outsmart hunters in the past.

  • @joesickler5888

    @joesickler5888

    Жыл бұрын

    Isn’t the “sperm” they were harvesting to make oil in the head, near the brain? I was just listening to a podcast about the Essex, but it was more comedy than science.

  • @stocktonjoans
    @stocktonjoans Жыл бұрын

    So if I understand this correctly, we don't have lizard brains . . . we have fish brains

  • @erianaharrison8783

    @erianaharrison8783

    Жыл бұрын

    😂

  • @albertohernandeza5661

    @albertohernandeza5661

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol, I thought the same.

  • @florida12341000

    @florida12341000

    Жыл бұрын

    im pretty sure the take away was we have horse brains right?

  • @0835SEBO

    @0835SEBO

    Жыл бұрын

    No U

  • @aram.v

    @aram.v

    Жыл бұрын

    You’re doing God’s work. You saved me 7min of my life.

  • @1495978707
    @1495978707 Жыл бұрын

    “Lizard brain” is literally just referring to how our brain is hierarchically structured. You have the most basic nervous system which regulates homeostasis, you have slightly higher stuff like motion planning, and then you have things like instincts, drives urges. The “lizard brain” is those last ones. This title is like saying it’s a myth that Spider-Man could make web shoot out of his arms. No one actually thinks we have a lizard brain inside of our actual brain

  • @LakshmiiSharma

    @LakshmiiSharma

    9 ай бұрын

    The point is that there is some meaning attach to brsin it's like you have lizard brain that's why you are irrational and make mistakes, that is problem tge narrative to attach to it, it's good thst brain structured like doesn't mean it developed like or may bd it's just brsin nothing particular function attach to it

  • @Fabyskan

    @Fabyskan

    9 ай бұрын

    This Video has a lot of "ACSHUALLY" energy

  • @SiqueScarface
    @SiqueScarface Жыл бұрын

    The term "lizard brain" should probably rather be "lizard-like amniote brain", as the split between Archosauriae (crocodiles, dinosaurs, pterosaurs, birds) and Lepidosauriae (lizards, snakes, comodo dragons et.al.) happened much later (around 245 million years ago) than the split between Diapsida (which include all the former groups) and Synapsida, of which mammals are the last surviving group (around 310 million years ago).

  • @JohnSmith-cq7lk
    @JohnSmith-cq7lk Жыл бұрын

    When people say "lizard brain" I dont think they mean literally, I think they are referring to the simple prehistoric part of the brain which does all the basic stuff.

  • @Z0mbiepaxk

    @Z0mbiepaxk

    Жыл бұрын

    Exactly

  • @meinbherpieg4723
    @meinbherpieg4723 Жыл бұрын

    People don't say "lizard brain" to literally mean the brain of a lizard. They say it to represent the parts of the brain that represent structures and operations that are rudimentary and likely evolved first.

  • @Snake-yx1dq
    @Snake-yx1dq Жыл бұрын

    I always thought lizards brain was like a metaphor. Didn't think it was thought to be real.

  • @727Phoenix
    @727Phoenix Жыл бұрын

    If Carl Sagan had learned he was wrong about the triune brain model (or about anything else, really) he likely would have accepted the correction, gratefully, because this is science not religion.

  • @SenorHamburgler

    @SenorHamburgler

    Жыл бұрын

    Sagan is the father of the new age scientism religion that pundits like Shill Nye, Neil Degreaser Tyson, and Steven Faking spew out. They will say the science is settled until they are proven wrong and then act like they never said anything definitive. Carl Sagan was a scientist, but he was a performer more than anything

  • @CattleyaHicks

    @CattleyaHicks

    Жыл бұрын

    the inclination to patronize & "prove wrong" the very giants upon whose shoulders today's scientists stand has made for a very spoiled laboratory environment! 💚I'd rather be a dragon in Eden or a charioteer than a lab-grown brain talking about itself.

  • @ChillAssTurtle

    @ChillAssTurtle

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@CattleyaHicksthe shoulders of what? Pro slavery dummies like jesus who thought the flu was a desert jhin that needed to be exorcized? Religious ppl have been murdering scientists and retarding human progress non stop for thousands of years. We have progressed *IN SPITE OF* religious lunatics.

  • @herlandercarvalho

    @herlandercarvalho

    Жыл бұрын

    Quite honestly, I'm even amazed he defended such an absurd theory to begin with, but yes I am sure, he would have corrected himself. But this is a good reminder that, people should stay in their lanes and not stray away to other topics they are not familiar with.

  • @ChillAssTurtle

    @ChillAssTurtle

    Жыл бұрын

    @@herlandercarvalho was he really pushing it super hard or was he like yeah my buddies in that field talked to me about this and it was convincing at the time?

  • @saikamal8665
    @saikamal8665 Жыл бұрын

    I've read her book how emotions are made and it was amazing

  • @Calimxra

    @Calimxra

    Жыл бұрын

    Same same it was a great book

  • @trappart9209

    @trappart9209

    Жыл бұрын

    Read some negative reviews on this book

  • @tmtb80

    @tmtb80

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@trappart9209on any given day, she is the most (or within the top 5) quoted scientists in the world. She's top of her field. People in that spot always get criticism from below.

  • @jonjacobjingleheimerschmid3798

    @jonjacobjingleheimerschmid3798

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@trappart9209that's always a given...

  • @bumblebaa2327

    @bumblebaa2327

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tmtb80 she shut down my open mind with the quib about people not having actual lizard brains. To me that's on par with creationists scoffing evolution because there're still monkeys around, at which time I turn away and let them be. Your comment makes me now think/hope it was a quib. I'll pry open my mind and take in some more of her words.

  • @arkapadma
    @arkapadma Жыл бұрын

    In my country we don't have lizard brain, we have shirmp brain.

  • @fifypuspadevi4813

    @fifypuspadevi4813

    Жыл бұрын

    Otak udang 😭

  • @funnytv-1631
    @funnytv-1631 Жыл бұрын

    Every time you are presented with a challenge, think of it as a choice point. These moments are precious opportunities. Life will get more interesting if you evolve along the way. You already know the old tune. Ask yourself if it is time for a new one. Paulo Coehlo said, “Never allow waiting to become a habit. Live your dreams and take risks. Life is happening now.”

  • @scrumptious9673
    @scrumptious9673 Жыл бұрын

    I’m glad she was honest about what we can and cannot know

  • @mariusskrupskis2042

    @mariusskrupskis2042

    Жыл бұрын

    tho still she implied her own conclusion at the end.. :D

  • @ludoviajante

    @ludoviajante

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mariusskrupskis2042 Lisa Feldman has 30 years in the field of neuroscience. I believe she is pretty much qualified to imply conclusions, unlike the self-help gurus who insist on the lizard brain theory.

  • @Envy_May

    @Envy_May

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@mariusskrupskis2042 i'm glad she at least explicitly put it as a philosophical opinion prefaced with "we can't know why". in my opinion it's a bad take though lol, if not just for the reason that humans evolved communally, not solitarily - like, communities of humans were in competition with other communities, not individual humans all in competition with each other, and as such, the important part biologically would be the traits circulating around the community's general gene pool getting passed down, including traits that lead to variance within the community, including members who wouldn't individually reproduce

  • @bryaneberly3588
    @bryaneberly3588 Жыл бұрын

    i've always heard it refered to as a "reptile brain," not a "lizard brain." this is literally the first context i've heard the latter used. that being said, mammals did come from reptiles, so the metaphor is still apt.

  • @Flufux

    @Flufux

    Жыл бұрын

    That is if we count early synapsids as being actual reptiles. Personally I doubt it since they were all far closer to us genetically than to any modern animal we classify as a 'reptiles'. Birds evolved from reptiles, that is very clear, but I'm not that sure about mammals doing the same.

  • @seto_kaiba_

    @seto_kaiba_

    Жыл бұрын

    Its still not apt become reptiles are not simple instinct machines from which mammals then humans progressed. Lizards and other reptiles have evolved well past that initial reptilian ancestor and their brains are closer to that of birds than mammals. None of these animals lack the structures for higher level thought. Humans are unique in terms of our intelligence in the sense that it is just that much more advanced than any animal-but reptiles, birds, and mammals all have structures (albeit different ones) for intelligent higher level thought.

  • @neco5740
    @neco5740 Жыл бұрын

    "And so the brain wondered: What was the brain good for?" -brain

  • @soarstar
    @soarstar2 ай бұрын

    Yet again, a story comes back to something I'll never forget my dad saying when I was ~13: "We're just here to make more"

  • @silkwurm
    @silkwurm Жыл бұрын

    Huh? Mammals and reptiles evolved from land dwelling basal amniotes, not fish! We needed to lay eggs on land, this ability didn’t evolve separately in the mammalian and reptile lines, it evolved once. these amniotes were already quite different from fish and basically reptiles. We of course have fish ancestors but also reptile ancestors.

  • @BKing007
    @BKing007 Жыл бұрын

    I watched video on three layers of brain just two days ago and now this pops up-

  • @serengetilion

    @serengetilion

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah me too. The other one is from Robert Sapolsky whom I'm a big fan of

  • @1982markjm
    @1982markjm Жыл бұрын

    So when you say there was an originating predator-prey moment, for a creature that can't think or make choices, was it just a matter of happenstance? It went to eat its "normal" diet, ingested something different by accident, then the circuitry got rewired to seek out the new thing because it was more energy efficient or whatever, and that snowballed into brains forming and gradually becoming more complex over time?

  • @mookster700

    @mookster700

    Жыл бұрын

    Agreed

  • @crunchyoats1862

    @crunchyoats1862

    Жыл бұрын

    I think it was just random beneficial mutations that were selected for because they helped the animal prey on others and helped that animal avoid becoming prey themselves, and as these mutations built up the animals grew larger and more complex bodies and those bigger bodies needed more co-ordination

  • @mitchelltj1

    @mitchelltj1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dinosaurb I don't buy it. How can an unintelligible, unguided, random process result in a thinking brain with consciousness? And then further more, how could you trust your own rationality if it were all the result of "randomness and mutations"?

  • @mAcCoLo666

    @mAcCoLo666

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@mitchelltj1 well, we've just been very lucky, apparently.

  • @claybarrel

    @claybarrel

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mitchelltj1 I mean, the way you criticize this idea it seems you aren't seeing the whole picture. Billions, maybe even trillions of these creatures over millions of years. Something fascinating is bound to happen. I'm sure there is more to the story, but this is a pretty simplistic explanation that people can understand and digest. No pun intended. LOL.

  • @kurtberg8495
    @kurtberg8495 Жыл бұрын

    probs to the guys who technically produced the interview. Setting is awesome and the fact the the windows are not clipped - such a satisfaction to watch.

  • @cassieoz1702
    @cassieoz1702 Жыл бұрын

    The triune brain is only a model people, to help explain the evolution of automatic/survival brain, social/emotional brain and rational/calculating/planning brain. I originally heard automatic/survival brain called dinosaur brain. Just a neat idea that everyone understands

  • @MrPelham32

    @MrPelham32

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah listening to her debunking this she doesn’t explain well the counter model.. it makes evolutionary sense to have a part of the brain that operates the autonomic nerves first and then further evolving emotions that drive more action and further evolving emotions that drive rational thought to survive in the world .. i don’t understand the point of this video honestly.. there’s no new insight here.. just a neuroscientist telling me the old model is wrong

  • @LeBionArc

    @LeBionArc

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@MrPelham32fully agree. This video brings nothing to the table other than a person "debunking a myth" which wasn't a myth to begin with.

  • @johnchristian5027

    @johnchristian5027

    Жыл бұрын

    @@LeBionArc Yup i agree she isnt really replacing the old modle with something new, it seems like just semantics to me

  • @paradiddlemcflam7167

    @paradiddlemcflam7167

    Жыл бұрын

    The myth, supposedly, is that each system evolved independentntly and in order from lower to higher on the brain stem. I am not sure if MacLean actually thought that to be the case., but even so, there are people influenced by MacLean who do not view it in those terms. But the video seems to want to throw out the idea that these structures are homologous in some degree is a bit too much. it is like saying that dog legs and lizard legs are not at all similar.

  • @MeCooper

    @MeCooper

    Жыл бұрын

    It's really strange that she's presenting an argument as if she's taking a metaphor literally. It's completely ridiculous

  • @TheGoodContent37
    @TheGoodContent37 Жыл бұрын

    Brains watching a brain talking about brains.

  • @spacealien3073
    @spacealien3073 Жыл бұрын

    The whole lizard brain thing is always kinda weird because the implications is that's where all your basic instincts are but lizards definitely react to situation with more than just pure instincts (like lizards can be taught to tolerate handling for example. That's knowledge they gained over time rather than something they had from birth).

  • @A.D.540

    @A.D.540

    Жыл бұрын

    I feel like almost all land animal can be trained it's sea creatures tha are rare. I don't know why that is

  • @5hydroxyT
    @5hydroxyT Жыл бұрын

    what i learned is that mice shouldn’t be allowed to have a gun until they are 60 days old

  • @roadwarrior6555
    @roadwarrior6555 Жыл бұрын

    Yes, technically we don't have lizard brains because they're not part of our evolutionary tree. But, we had some lizard like ancestors in the form of the Synapsids during the Permian era. I think "lizard brain" is referring to a very early lizard like land animal that is also a common ancestor with mammals. This ancestor would share brain features with only part of our brain which is the "lizard brain".

  • @realtalk5329

    @realtalk5329

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree. Also mammals also evolved from amphibians

  • @itsjustme6632

    @itsjustme6632

    Жыл бұрын

    I think Aron would be proud of you.

  • @grisflyt

    @grisflyt

    Жыл бұрын

    Still incorrect. The reptile brain and mammal brain are very different. It's like saying a car is a simpler form of an airplane. The bird brain is very different from the mammalian brain, yet some birds are very smart. Of course, birds are technically reptiles. Animals are good at the things they need to be good at and subsequently have the brain they need.

  • @realtalk5329

    @realtalk5329

    Жыл бұрын

    @@grisflyt saying birds are technically reptiles is like saying mammals are technically amphibians

  • @ramblincapuchin9075

    @ramblincapuchin9075

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@realtalk5329That seems to be the joke. In a realm where the earth was mostly covered in water, the species that can navigate such an environment is going to be predominantly amphibian But the point is that as mammals came into being, there would be traces of their genetic being that stem back to amphibious physiology. As in the reproductive system had not developed into the placenta base that mammals are known for

  • @paulkurilecz4209
    @paulkurilecz4209 Жыл бұрын

    What I find fascinating about brains and nervous systems are those of octopi. Yes there is a central brain, but about 2/3rds of its neurons are located in its arms. Which to me means that its neural system is more like a conductor leading an orchestra or perhaps a combination of centrally located sensory and response with semi independent distributed sensory and response apparatus. The accepted hallmarks of intelligence are very much present in octopi (puzzle solving, manipulation of the local environment and so on) that I wonder how their neural system has allowed them to develop these behavioral abilities. The other thing that I find curious about octopi is the combination of radial and lateral symmetry. Another item that I am curious about with octopi are the suckers on their tentacles. Surely these must have some purpose other than grasping objects. If they are a sensory organ, what are they sensing? Note: I am trying very hard to avoid the computer analogies as I do not wish to try to explain something by using an analogy of analogy.

  • @dmitriyturpakov453
    @dmitriyturpakov453 Жыл бұрын

    3 weeks earlier The Well channel posted video which is called You have 3 brains by Robert Sapolsky.

  • @serengetilion

    @serengetilion

    Жыл бұрын

    I know right, what's going on here?

  • @dmitriyturpakov453

    @dmitriyturpakov453

    Жыл бұрын

    Let them fight.

  • @pablognecco1102
    @pablognecco1102 Жыл бұрын

    Carl Sagan never said that we have "lizard brains". In fact, modern reptiles and mammals both evolved from reptilian like animals (Reptiliomorpha and Amniota), back in the late carboniferous períod, 318 million years ago. Moreover, evolution has showed to the extent of exhaustion, that novel structures have to evolve by coopting preexisting ones. It's one of the basic principles underlying embryology and development.

  • @te4st111
    @te4st111 Жыл бұрын

    Is is very important to keep in mind, that Lisa Feldman Barrett cannot be considered a researcher but rather a book author masked as a researcher.

  • @howardjuliewiley5629
    @howardjuliewiley5629 Жыл бұрын

    That was refreshing. She sounds like a verifiable scientist. In Buddhism, we practice letting go to all ego attachments which can be, "I have the answers!" We practice awareness and accept that all of reality is a projection from the mind.

  • @freedombro6502

    @freedombro6502

    Жыл бұрын

    But somethings are tangible and not creations of the mind

  • @dianelipson5420

    @dianelipson5420

    Жыл бұрын

    @@freedombro6502 read “The Master and His Emissary” and then any Oliver Sachs. The way we experience reality and actual reality are two very different things. Yes things are both tangible and real. And no, that doesn’t mean we experience them as some kind of objective reality. I use this metaphor a lot to explain perception. Two guys in the woods. One is a park ranger, the other guy is a first timer in the wilderness. It’s the exact same stimuli for both men, with two dramatically different responses, even physiologically. The ranger knows to be cautious, and avoids the bear with experience. The other guy might have a complete adrenaline dump and freeze or run. The way we experience tangible reality is often in a manner very different from our fellow humans.

  • @ChillAssTurtle

    @ChillAssTurtle

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@dianelipson5420its so annoying when clueless ppl like you think youre saying something profound.. when in reality youre just huffing your own farts

  • @markhathaway9456

    @markhathaway9456

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dianelipson5420 It's not easy to be objective about our own sense of Reality. It may even be impossible.

  • @dianelipson5420

    @dianelipson5420

    Жыл бұрын

    @@markhathaway9456 oh absolutely. It’s one of those things where we must rely heavily on science for the facts. Science is our objectivity, and it too is flawed. The way the news reports unconfirmed studies trouble me. To even come close to scientific objectivity we must have multiple confirmations on the results of studies, whenever possible. Without at least one confirmation, how can we regard unrepeated results as fact?

  • @CattleyaHicks
    @CattleyaHicks Жыл бұрын

    Life is truly a never-ending sci-fi story. 💫

  • @berniv7375

    @berniv7375

    Жыл бұрын

    Well. We have to remember that the scientists are only speculating a theory that the brain developed because one animal intentionally ate another. The reason they came to that conclusion could be explained by the fact that the scientists were possibly biased due to their own primitive action of eating the flesh of other animals. This is a dangerous theory and as a vegan I oppose it. We need to continue evolving as a species and to do that we all need to go vegan. That is what I believe.🌱

  • @StealthyDead
    @StealthyDead Жыл бұрын

    I thought that this was going to be about the "you only use 10% of your brain and you could use telekinesis if you used all of it" BS

  • @ezrakairoscano8766
    @ezrakairoscano87666 ай бұрын

    Feldman barret’s iconoclastic thinking ; gotta love her

  • @zarrouguilucas2585
    @zarrouguilucas2585 Жыл бұрын

    I don't see how this explanation (very interesting nonetheless) go against the lizard brain theory, that I understand as: "there's a part of our brains dedicated to basic survival and urges". Please correct me if I'm wrong and enlighten me about this

  • @fluxo_musical

    @fluxo_musical

    Жыл бұрын

    I felt like she was insisting in the the wrongness of the "lizard brain" hypothesis, because "we don't have the brain of a lizard"... well, yeah . The triune brain is supposed to be a model to explain differences in the brain, but just a model. Nobody said that we literally have a lizard brain inside of us.... that's weird.

  • @zarrouguilucas2585

    @zarrouguilucas2585

    Жыл бұрын

    That was my feeling as well.

  • @Envy_May

    @Envy_May

    Жыл бұрын

    i think the point here would most favourably be that there isn't one "part" of the brain dedicated to those things, but rather that they're more just traits that are part of the overall brain soup and are not untouched nor separate from our more recently evolved traits. also i've seen some people use "lizard brain" as an excuse to armchair-psychoanalyse subconscious intent in behaviours which have much simpler and more self-evident explanations that don't require imagining the presence of invisible ulterior motives that can't be proven i will say though, at the end, while she gives a reasonable preface about not knowing the reasons i.e. the causes for certain things to evolve and we can only philosophically speculate based on function, i think the conclusion she reaches from that point of "the ultimate job is to pass on your genes" is still a bad take in how weirdly prescriptive it is lol, just not as bad as when people imply that literally every action we take is subconsciously driven by a lizard brain desire to reproduce (anyway i said this in another comment but humans evolved communally, not solitarily, i.e. communities were in competition with other communities, much less so individual humans in competition with each other, so for certain traits to be passed down it would not have been necessary for every individual with those traits to reproduce, but rather their community as a whole do well and continue on, in which there was some chance of having those traits circulating around the general gene pool)

  • @LuisAlbertoRodriguezGoff
    @LuisAlbertoRodriguezGoff Жыл бұрын

    Lizard brain just alludes to the oldest or most primitive part of the brain. As far as I know. I never knew people thought that we had literally lizard’s brains

  • @Brancaalice

    @Brancaalice

    3 ай бұрын

    You dont have lizard brains, human have evolucted brain from primitive creatures.

  • @friskybitzboi
    @friskybitzboi Жыл бұрын

    I always thought the “lizard brain” was the limbic system because reptiles have instincts and base emotions (at least fear, aggression, attraction) but not higher thought. So when you’re acting on instinct or base feelings, your “lizard brain” is driving your behavior more predominantly than your cerebral cortex

  • @PolitoLopez
    @PolitoLopez9 ай бұрын

    Just beautiful! Listening to her, her words; the music was just beautiful, I would sit next to her and listen to her all day.

  • @davetarpley3740
    @davetarpley3740 Жыл бұрын

    Lizards can be quite intelligent. Tegus and Savanah monitors are two of several large lizards that make wonderful, if high-maintenance, pets. They can bond with their owners and can even play with toys. Some lizards are more social creatures than once thought possible. Some pair bond, some live in burrows with extended family members. Reptiles deserve more respect than we give them.

  • @jeffthompson9622

    @jeffthompson9622

    Жыл бұрын

    My experience was more with salvator monitors and heloderma, but consistent with your statement. They seek out the company of the humans in their lives.

  • @insankamil2909

    @insankamil2909

    8 ай бұрын

    yeah, Exothermic animals are more efficient in their internal metabolic processes, this does not mean that they are more intelligent, high top-tier predator or prey, or complex than endothermic animals. maybe a question, if metabolic efficiency is the fundamental biological rate that governs most observed patterns in ecology, then what happen with reptile ? how does the contrary happen with human(endothermic organisms)? is the fundamental biological rate, are not really connected with the complexity of brain?

  • @Eliaelcapocho
    @Eliaelcapocho Жыл бұрын

    I watched this amazing lecture while we’re 2 weeks away from my wedding day. I can’t describe how you revised a major thought in me at 06:45

  • @BR.

    @BR.

    Жыл бұрын

    Please do describe! It will change your life!

  • @pewlivepie5006

    @pewlivepie5006

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol 😂

  • @zazen108
    @zazen108 Жыл бұрын

    I've seen so many video that claim to debunk the triune brain theory and then don't. It doesn't matter to me if it's true or false, I'm ready to follow the evidence, but they don't explain what is wrong.

  • @blakespower
    @blakespower Жыл бұрын

    good point that mammals and lizards evolved at nearly the same time from a common ancestor same with dinosaurs/birds

  • @never2yield20
    @never2yield20 Жыл бұрын

    Yeah I read that Carl Sagan book decades ago. It does appear that theory was very flawed, DNA based science has come along way since then. The brain function improvements that gave us an environmental and subsequent reproductive advantage would more likely survive and see further gain. Our chimp and ape cousins would be the first to consider in comparison. Being able to climb trees is a common trait, and helps simian critters survive predation. Our biggest threat nowadays is our fellow sapiens that use their large prefrontal cortex to dream up bigger and more deadly ways to kill another sapient critter. Sad. Evolutionary dead-end.

  • @jeevan444
    @jeevan444 Жыл бұрын

    i recently started reading a book called the courage to be disliked which talks about teleology and trauma, and it’s a fascinating link to our purpose and goal. we’re capable of continuously evolving as this video shows. and i think a huge stage in that human evolution is emotional intelligence and self awareness. i highly recommend the book to anyone familiar with sigmand freud and even carl jung’s work. because it actually brings to light the work of a third prominent psychologist named alfred adler, who i think hasn’t been recognized as much. his work holds the key to how we can take charge of our own story and grow despite our past traumas and conditionings.

  • @JeanDavid3

    @JeanDavid3

    Жыл бұрын

    Name of the book pls?

  • @MrYugideck

    @MrYugideck

    Жыл бұрын

    @@JeanDavid3 Bot?

  • @Jamesbonk01
    @Jamesbonk01 Жыл бұрын

    As a killer main, I always let one survivor live and started to enjoy the game when I stopped caring about killing survivors and just playing for fun and not going on chases if I dont enjoy them

  • @alexalekos
    @alexalekos Жыл бұрын

    we need a special vid describing the history of the brain in detail

  • @lm1367
    @lm1367 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you SO MUCH for this! As a neuroscientist, it annoys me no end every time someone repeats that old nonsense about lizard brains, "emotion centers" (the limbic system) etc. Another idiotic version of this myth is the "Polyvagal Theory". The brain is just too complex for these oversimplifications to work, that's why scientists can spend a lifetime trying to understand one tiny part of it. There will be no theory that explains the whole brain, deal with it.

  • @MrPelham32

    @MrPelham32

    Жыл бұрын

    I get what you are saying but doesn’t make evolutionary sense that the base part of the brain evolved first and was more autonomic which drove evolution of the lymbic part of the brain which allowed emotions to drive actions to survive.. eventually leading to emotions to drive abstract thinking in the prefrontal cortex and to plan for possible scenarios of the future and better manipulation of the environment?

  • @markhathaway9456

    @markhathaway9456

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MrPelham32 Ha. Using logic on scientists is hopeless. /s

  • @lm1367

    @lm1367

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MrPelham32 It could make sense, if brains were so clearly compartmentalized. Yes, there is some modularity, especially with regard to sensory processing, but emotions are not easy to separate from other cognitive processes, especially in the messiness of real life. There are no complex emotions without complex cognition. Even integrating complex sensory input into simple action output still requires some level of pattern recognition which can quickly get abstract. Only if both your sensory input and your action outputs are very simple, can you get away with not having many cognitive capacities, but then you also don't need any emotional complexity.

  • @wayando
    @wayando Жыл бұрын

    Did anyone ever think we actually have a brain from a lizard built it?! 😂 ... I think the idea was that the functions of the brain are layered from basic/ vital/ automatic to advanced higher functions that we vontrol at will.

  • @saskiascott8181

    @saskiascott8181

    Жыл бұрын

    yes I think we all understood it as a metaphor for that, right?

  • @wayando

    @wayando

    Жыл бұрын

    @@saskiascott8181 ... That's why I was wondering what exactly was being debunked ... When we all know we don't have a brain like that of a lizard.

  • @blargminton
    @blargminton Жыл бұрын

    my mans over here be lookin at memes and goin "um ackchyually"

  • @StevXtreme
    @StevXtreme Жыл бұрын

    This absolutely doesn't mean thought processing doesn't function in layers of priority. It just means it isn't physically layered (i.e. is not in layers made of DNA of different "tenure"). It is equivalently the same in output as in the physically layered model.

  • @jamesm.3307
    @jamesm.3307 Жыл бұрын

    The brain myth was immortalized in Star Trek, where Spock was rational, Bones was emotional, and Scotty was the cerebellum, which were all directed by Kirk.

  • @originaluddite

    @originaluddite

    Жыл бұрын

    So, Scotty was instinct? All this puts me in mind of a 90s sit-com called Herman's Head.

  • @MXB2001

    @MXB2001

    Жыл бұрын

    @@originaluddite Wow, someone else who remembers it.

  • @MXB2001

    @MXB2001

    Жыл бұрын

    Spock's Brain? : )

  • @originaluddite

    @originaluddite

    Жыл бұрын

    @@MXB2001 at the time some of my friends used Herman's Head as a shorthand to understanding themselves. 😀

  • @user-ld9tf4td8s

    @user-ld9tf4td8s

    Жыл бұрын

    That's not referring to the brain. That's referring to the tripartite mind. And Scotty wasn't involved It's, Id -Bones, Ego - Spock, and Superego - Kirk

  • @15509020sl
    @15509020sl Жыл бұрын

    i love this series

  • @heatseekerx51
    @heatseekerx51 Жыл бұрын

    "They may take our lives, but they'll never take... OUR LIZARD BRAINS!!!"

  • @Gravitedious
    @Gravitedious Жыл бұрын

    The idea that "an animal to suddenly hunt and that's why brains evolved" passes the explanatory buck by taking for granted that such a first decisive animal wouldn't have needed a brain to make the decision.. not a good basis for explaining emergence. Terrance Deacon offers an empirically testable model for the emergence of mind.

  • @MaryamAhmed-on9hu
    @MaryamAhmed-on9hu Жыл бұрын

    The music is distracting

  • @user-bi8ge4xy1j

    @user-bi8ge4xy1j

    Ай бұрын

    Tell me you have ADHD without…. Yes.

  • @MaryamAhmed-on9hu

    @MaryamAhmed-on9hu

    Ай бұрын

    @@user-bi8ge4xy1j 😄 spot on

  • @gratefulkm
    @gratefulkm Жыл бұрын

    I love the way people within collective illusions cant see out of them, for billions of years the instinct brain (run program and fight or flight) was the prime focus, otherwise known as the Thalamus= insects Then for billions of years the focus was Bird/lizard electro magnetic (attachment and emotional range(meaning deciding when to fight or flight)) otherwise known as the Amygdala Then for billions of years the focus was on the Cortices Its that simple but , she is trapped within a confirmation bias bubble that elevates the importance of the cortices in awareness The order to evolve comes from the base of all things and therefore to say we are not on the same branch is literally "cant see the wood for the trees"

  • @WhatWouldVillainsDo
    @WhatWouldVillainsDo Жыл бұрын

    I was a kid growing up in the 80s and the idea of the lizard brain was still being taught at that time.

  • @mattchew5965
    @mattchew5965 Жыл бұрын

    I hung out every day at a pet store and was fascinated by reptiles. Just like politicians, you don't see much activity from reptiles unless you turn the heat up.

  • @reneverlaine7346
    @reneverlaine7346 Жыл бұрын

    She is a beast and ahead of her time. If you read her, most psychological theories become obsolete. The brain is definitely a predictive entity, learning that changed the way I look at the world. Keep it up. 😊

  • @mikemcintosh9933
    @mikemcintosh9933 Жыл бұрын

    While the concept may be scientifically inaccurate, the metaphor has utility in the field of psychotherapy. By describing emotional and physical dysregulation as originating from an older part of the brain the experience of dysregulation may be normalized and put in context rather than judged or shamed. Escalation and agitation are normal parts of brain function, and with the application of a few simple skills we can learn to give our rational brain time to engage and improve outcomes in relationships and interactions. My staff actively and deliberately teach clients that they have a lizard brain, it's important, it's o.k. to have one, and when we keep our "evolved brain" in the drivers seat we become more effective agents in a host of situations. We get good results with this approach.

  • @insankamil2909

    @insankamil2909

    8 ай бұрын

    yeah, we always seek an explanation for something bad that cause something what we don't want(essensially something that torture us) . how will it be, if we just accept everything, and tolerating it?

  • @aronhighgrove4100

    @aronhighgrove4100

    3 ай бұрын

    Actually I think it's harmful to therapy, because it's based on a consequential misconception: it labels (strong) emotions as primitive and negative, and rational thought as superior, when actually the whole brain has evolved, including the "primitive" "old" parts of the brain. It has been shown that when people entirely lose emotions they make *worse* decisions. A lot of problems cannot be solved purely logically. All parts of the brain have a function, instead of controlling "primitive" parts of the brain, and letting the "rational" part take over and dominate the rest, we should broaden our focus and listen to more voices in our brain. The issue is tunnel vision, not the emotions we feel. Another rational form of tunnel vision is not better, it's equally limited.

  • @aronhighgrove4100

    @aronhighgrove4100

    3 ай бұрын

    It's actually a harmful fallacy to keep teaching that in therapy: all parts of your brain have a useful function, numbing some out / controlling them will not make you see clearer. What you want to do is broaden your tunnel vision, not replace it with "rational" kind of tunnel vision. The shame and judgement of (strong) emotional responses comes from ignorance and a morale view that is simplistic. Alleviating that shame with another misunderstanding is not helpful. It has been shown that many problems cannot be decided purely logically, and that people with no emotions will get stuck. Tunnel vision is what creates issues, replacing it with a "rational" kind of tunnel view is not improving things, it's limiting you in other ways.

  • @gossumx
    @gossumxАй бұрын

    Mammals and lizards are on different trees that split from Therapsida, often called mammal-like reptiles, and not at the point of fish.

  • @KommentarSpaltenKrieger
    @KommentarSpaltenKrieger Жыл бұрын

    well, plato talked about the soul, and he didn't talk about instinct and emotion. he said similar things, but this way of putting it is identical to the medievals which tended to picture the romans as medieval in clothing, architecture and habit.

  • @JustWojtek
    @JustWojtek Жыл бұрын

    one wonders how a theory for which there is little to no evidence survives successfully up until today ...

  • @nosotrosloslobosestamosreg4115

    @nosotrosloslobosestamosreg4115

    Жыл бұрын

    Because as a metaphor it explains our daily behaviour in an easy and comprehensive way.

  • @Prestrev1010

    @Prestrev1010

    Жыл бұрын

    I say an appeal to authority, since Carl Sagan said it, it must be “ true.” From there it took on a life of its own.

  • @thedanielfuentes

    @thedanielfuentes

    Жыл бұрын

    good stories don't need to be true, they just need to be memorable

  • @JustWojtek

    @JustWojtek

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thedanielfuentes that's kinda true, I guess. mimetics state something similar, I believe. It's not the best ideas that get past on, but the most replicable.

  • @howardjuliewiley5629

    @howardjuliewiley5629

    Жыл бұрын

    For the same reason we have religions........it gives us a sense of control.

  • @JesusRodriguez-fo2br
    @JesusRodriguez-fo2br Жыл бұрын

    I always connected the "lizard brain" to the area of the brain that controls our emotions, hence why we are driven to action through our emotions. Also known as the amygdala. So many of us live our lives under control of the amygdala instinct, unaware of how our emotions govern our actions, when in reality it should be the other way around. Our actions, or our mind controlling our emotions. To be aware of this is to realize that at any giving moment, our bodies respond to our environment in a very "animal" way, prompting our brains to think equal to our environment. This part of our brain hasnt evolved because we have all stayed stuck in enjoying the benefits of fight and flight adrenaline response that we all live with on a daily basis now. If we can learn to rewire our thought process eventually over time, we wont need to be so wired all the time, and quite possibly unlock different mental capacities that have been burried deep inside our brains. Could it be that we use a very limited capacity of our brain power for this reason? Until we learn to let go of anamocity, we will never evolve into something more.

  • @insankamil2909

    @insankamil2909

    8 ай бұрын

    yeah, we always seek an explanation for something bad that cause something what we don't want(essensially something that torture us) . how will it be, if we just accept everything, and tolerating it?

  • @Drteomas
    @Drteomas Жыл бұрын

    It's not meant this litteral. Like left and right brain are not actually the left and the right side of the brain but it has a certain meaning.

  • @kpunkt.klaviermusik
    @kpunkt.klaviermusik4 ай бұрын

    I had to lookup "metabolic" since it sounds so misterious. What a surprise, it simply means "Stoffwechsel".

  • @hourvoyses3522
    @hourvoyses3522 Жыл бұрын

    "The only animal on this planet that has a lizard brain is a lizard." She was spittin!!!

  • @prototype0398
    @prototype0398 Жыл бұрын

    Why do i think i have watched this exact video before.

  • @DiVa-ks2jg

    @DiVa-ks2jg

    Жыл бұрын

    Me too

  • @noeditbookreviews
    @noeditbookreviews Жыл бұрын

    I saw the picture and thought "I already knew this cause I read about it in Lisa Feldman Barrett books." Then I saw the title with her name, lol.

  • @BreakingTheCycleAuthor
    @BreakingTheCycleAuthor4 ай бұрын

    Its well known that this model isn't an accurate evolutionary model, its a great model used to describe our unconscious and conscious brain, like Freud's topographical model of the mind.

  • @m2pozad
    @m2pozad Жыл бұрын

    I don't feel compelled to pass my jeans along. I use them, patch and repair as needed, then trash them. Our leading neuroscientist needs smaller scarves that don't look like neck braces. And I never really know with her if I'm learning something or unlearning something.

  • @rowanaster3986
    @rowanaster3986 Жыл бұрын

    Gosh, I hope this video blows up. The pervasive use of the triune brain myth in the modern day is really frustrating. We absolutely need to, as a society, do away with the notion that logic and emotion are in contention with one another in the brain and the triune brain myth's long running history is the main contributor to that false idea.

  • @donaldbest1154

    @donaldbest1154

    Жыл бұрын

    How exactly would you tackle helping someone with an anger based impulse control issue. Would you tell them their rational and emotional selves were not really in conflict? What would you say to them as they reported watching in horror as they lost control of themselves and did and said things they regretted AS they knew they were about to do them? Myth is not a false story but one that contains truth rather than is true. This myth does not create this inner experience it just seeks to explain it.

  • @rowanaster3986

    @rowanaster3986

    Жыл бұрын

    @@donaldbest1154 I wouldn't tackle that at all, because I'm not a professional expert. This isn't a question to ask a layperson. What I do know, is that I'm quite confident that professional experts would be operating much more efficiently if they were developing their methodologies based on updated accurate models of the human brain, instead of falling back on outdated models. The fact of the matter is, that all the recent research in neurology and emotion shows that there is no fundamental separation between rationality and emotion. They are intrinsically linked to one another and all actions and behaviors come down stream from our instances of emotion and the concepts that our brains use to run predictions and interpret data. What good is does it do to explain someone's experience using a model of their brain that is completely false?

  • @searchforserenity8058

    @searchforserenity8058

    Жыл бұрын

    Not quite. Amygdala hijack is a real phenomenon and is exactly what propaganda purposely triggers so you are more suggestible. They don't call it "propaganda " any more, though. It's advertising or public relations. Watch a few videos on the science behind this and you start to see why so many of us are angry, depressed and anxious with little impulse control. Being in a frequent threat response does not lead you to greater heights of critical thinking, but instead to increased irrationality.

  • @Aaron.Thomas

    @Aaron.Thomas

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@donaldbest1154 I would have the intelligence to use a better metephor than one that propagates myth, superstition, religious ideology or other hokum. And I'd avoid relying of argumentation from lack of imagination as some kind of rationality to persist in ignorance.

  • @donaldbest1154

    @donaldbest1154

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Aaron.Thomas We are clearly concerned about different areas of ignorance. I am not concerned with truth on some ideal level. You can't just say you would replace practical tools you need to actually do it. Or I consider your enlightenment darkness.

  • @user-nj8xi2ct9x
    @user-nj8xi2ct9x Жыл бұрын

    I like brain stuff, so I just bought her book on audible, will be interested to hear it. The flip side is that I'm wondering if the "debunking" critique here is substantive, in that it seems to rest on the point that modern reptiles have structures in their brain that are homologous to non-reptile parts of the human brain. However, if they're homologous but also not comparable in terms of function while the so-called "lizard brain" is similar between humans and reptiles, then one could still defend the use of the term "lizard brain."

  • @hectormontes7056
    @hectormontes7056 Жыл бұрын

    I feel like this is something that was used as a metaphor for where functions are or what functions are more basic and primordial, but then it was taken literally. As if evolution works by just putting another layer on top.

  • @j.a.velarde5901
    @j.a.velarde5901 Жыл бұрын

    Long live free Internet Documentaries!! God bless you and Godspeed.

  • @patrickwhite6364
    @patrickwhite6364 Жыл бұрын

    It's refreshing to hear a scientist admit that explanations for why evolution occurs are inherently subjective. Science addresses how, not why.

  • @randomshittutorials
    @randomshittutorials Жыл бұрын

    I love this video but I disagree with that we can never check "WHY" something evolved. We can definitely connect the dots to a massive extend, and producing offspring is not the only goal, the better explanation would be "to support the survival of the species".

  • @em945
    @em945 Жыл бұрын

    I think I am still just the 'stomach on a stick'.

  • @thetranscendedman
    @thetranscendedman Жыл бұрын

    TL;DW - The neuroscientist argues the brain is adaptive, not triune. They sadly don't say much to support their argument though.

  • @erianaharrison8783

    @erianaharrison8783

    Жыл бұрын

    ​​​​​@@meech3576 Did either of you even watch the video? 🙄 She discussed how "molecular genetic techniques" were used by neuroscientists, which debunked the triune brain theory. They studied cells and realized the "brain didn't evolve in layers." There is a portion of the video that explains this. Also, it's a video that has been chopped and edited. If it seemed like a bad essay, it's probably more so due to the way it was edited. Perhaps she spent an hour explaining that was then cut down to 7 min.

  • @erianaharrison8783

    @erianaharrison8783

    Жыл бұрын

    @@meech3576 Yeah

  • @Tymbus
    @Tymbus Жыл бұрын

    Having sat in community mental health classes telling me we have Lizard brains I am so glad to hear someone challenging this ie we don't have lizard brains because we aren't evolved from lizards! Good grief! I can now refer people to this video.

  • @Tymbus

    @Tymbus

    Жыл бұрын

    Hey! Thanks for the love Big Think BUT I've watched Big Think videos that perpetuate the lizard brain rubbish - find them and take them down!!

  • @AzimuthAviation

    @AzimuthAviation

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Tymbus Bare in mind that Barrett is a clinical psychologist...

  • @donaldbest1154

    @donaldbest1154

    Жыл бұрын

    We absolutely evolved from creatures anyone today would call lizards if they saw them IRL. And you seem to have miss the point. This video did nothing to address the concepts that this "story" teaches. It does NOT say the brain stem isn't responsible for basic metabolic functions, the limbic isn't isn't primarily responsible for emotions. The conclusion it makes about the about the development time of the cerebral cortex is gibberish. We don't really end up with a bigger cerebral cortex it just looks that way because it develops for longer into a bigger thing?

  • @ChillAssTurtle

    @ChillAssTurtle

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@AzimuthAviationlol i love how your response is just - keep in mind, shes way smarter than me and the big words are hurting me.

  • @saskiascott8181

    @saskiascott8181

    Жыл бұрын

    @@donaldbest1154 yeah I didn't understand the point of that last bit... like what does it mean it "looks like" we have bigger prefrontal cortexes compared to the rest of our brains? Does that mean it's an optical illusion or something?

  • @richardleetbluesharmonicac7192
    @richardleetbluesharmonicac7192 Жыл бұрын

    Lizard brain is an analogy to our fight or flight part of our brain

  • @manifestwithmichael5416

    @manifestwithmichael5416

    Жыл бұрын

    The whole brain is responding/reacting to stimuli in the present moment, based on data it has collected in the past and how it perceives it needs to assist you to survive or carry out your daily or future activities. So fight flight or freeze become irrelevant when you realize your brain is just doing its job based on how YOU judge/perceive the present moment. The less threatened you feel in your daily life the less of a need for any fight-flight or freeze mechanisms. What a remarkable gift for humanity.

  • @McL0VINNN
    @McL0VINNN Жыл бұрын

    I have a goldfish brain. I forget shit in 7 seconds.

  • @donaldbest1154
    @donaldbest1154 Жыл бұрын

    I don't think this video did anything to refute - whatever it is she thinks she is refuting. Often times scientists cherry pick and only notice what isn't working about a common understanding of a thing and argue against it's flaws without honoring OR replacing the utility of this understanding. This video is guilty of that. Of course - for instance our motor control needed to evolve with our changing bodies. So if people think that simply because our expanded cerebral cortex is where the hominid action mostly was. Its not hard to point out that some parts of tool use required changes deeper down. It doesn't just look like mice have a smaller cerebral cortex they do all that extra time results in a much larger brain to body mass and much larger cerebrals cortex verses the rest.... Her statements seem less accurate than any misconception she is trying to debunk. Genetics debunks the tripart brain because of development times??? We don't have lizard brains because our first amniote ancestors (who meet any lay persons idea of a lizard exactly) weren't technically lizards from a scientists point of view you need to understand jargon like post orbital fenestra's to understand. I say leave science communication to people like Carl Sagan and stop trying to contradict him. When you show your ignorance of common sense you look like a fool legitimately.

  • @rowanaster3986

    @rowanaster3986

    Жыл бұрын

    My guy, you do realize that Lisa Feldman Barrett is in the top 1% of cited neuroscience researchers right

  • @freedombro6502

    @freedombro6502

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@rowanaster3986so are you saying she is not cherry picking data? Is she beyond reproach?

  • @rowanaster3986

    @rowanaster3986

    Жыл бұрын

    @@freedombro6502 Nope. Didn't say that. Dude said she's showing her ignorance, and I can assure you she's not ignorant. Having read her books, many of the papers her lab has published, and watched hours of lectures and interviews about her research, I'm much more confident that to lay the blame on Big Think for poor editing. Especially given that they're a pop sci publication. Lisa Feldman Barrett is doing her best to increase the PR and better the public understanding around neuroscientific concepts that have gone wildly misunderstood for a long time. Emotions being the big one. Triune brain myth has a lot to do with that. So, it makes sense that she'd do a few video segments for Big Think to try and further disseminate her lab's research.

  • @Aaron.Thomas

    @Aaron.Thomas

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree with your comments. Just, not about the person you're referring to. someone else here.

  • @donaldbest1154

    @donaldbest1154

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rowanaster3986 This has no relevance to the question of this as successful peace of communication to the general public. She probably benefits greatly from the peer review process. Your appeal to authority is not logical response.

  • @tonyburton419
    @tonyburton419 Жыл бұрын

    For therapeutic purposes, the triune brain serves a metaphorical purpose - and in part, is felt internally as experientially having value to make sense of our lived experience & different motivations. However, in modern CBT, in particular CFT, there is more of a recognition of our various motivations, and uses a metaphor for our drive-threat & soothing systems. Lisa's theory is quite a physically reductionist model? Mere thoughts...

  • @neththom999

    @neththom999

    Жыл бұрын

    I don't think it invalidates any of that. That group of structures called the "lizard brain" didn't evolve from lizards, that's all.

  • @erianaharrison8783

    @erianaharrison8783

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@neththom999 I agree, like you said it's not about metaphorical therapeutic uses

  • @rowanaster3986

    @rowanaster3986

    Жыл бұрын

    I would argue that it's not a useful metaphorical concept, but what she's pointing out is that the concept of the triune brain is not a metaphor. This is a real neurological model that has existed for 50 years. And it has been the leading model of the human brain for far too long, because it's not accurate. It doesn't even come close to describing how the human brain evolved, how it develops, or how it processes sense data. I don't think it's useful to use metaphorical concepts that draw on a truncated representation of the human brain. I think we are more than capable of coming up with metaphors that map onto modern models of how the human brain functions without sacrificing any efficacy in their application

  • @rowanaster3986

    @rowanaster3986

    Жыл бұрын

    @@meech3576 I don't even need to, because Big Think released another video last week with the same researcher, Lisa Feldman Barrett, explaining emotions better than I ever could. Don't fall into the trap of believing that every person that identifies the inefficacy of something must also be the one to identify the solution. It's an unreasonable way to approach the concept of problem solving. In fact, I'd recommend you engage with all of LFB's work, as she has a litany of brilliant metaphors for the brain as a modern model.

  • @rowanaster3986

    @rowanaster3986

    Жыл бұрын

    @@meech3576 additionally, I don't think you give your fellow sapiens enough credit, if you think we need oversimplified metaphors that function on an outdated model to explain this stuff to laypeople. People aren't stupid. They're underinformed

  • @robertturtle
    @robertturtle5 ай бұрын

    Actually, the horses are 5 and are the 5 senses, and the charioteer is the mind

  • @bhamama2966
    @bhamama29668 ай бұрын

    this makes me want to go back to school. awesome!

  • @maiaallman4635
    @maiaallman4635 Жыл бұрын

    Diane Keaton vibes.

  • @somethingyousaid5059

    @somethingyousaid5059

    Жыл бұрын

    Annie who

  • @gregmoreau693
    @gregmoreau693 Жыл бұрын

    Um, pretty sure "lizard brain" is a metaphor for the fight/flight survival instinct inherent in lizards, but it's not meant literally. And this is "Big Thinking"? o,O Um...

  • @portableaccount9818

    @portableaccount9818

    Жыл бұрын

    No, no: the terms was used because it was initially supposed that the structure was shared with that of lizards indicating a common evolutionary origin. Nowadays, the term can be used to indicate a “simple and instinctual way of thinking”, but the majority of people (in the academic field too, unfortunately) think that the meaning is still literal

  • @JustWojtek

    @JustWojtek

    Жыл бұрын

    you would be surprised how many people take this literally ...

  • @erdwaenor

    @erdwaenor

    Жыл бұрын

    Well, I would say: Metaphors are never _exact_ of course, otherwise they wouldn't be metaphors after all, right? But, if we analyse metaphors just for their quality of more accurately and ingeniously representing reality seen from a specific domain (such as the scientific domain in general), it should be possible to evaluate if a metaphor is _better_ or _worse_ , for the interests of such particular context. This certainly doesn't mean we should discard metaphors at all, but we should always try to develop better, more insightful ones, according to the context.

  • @ChronoHarvester

    @ChronoHarvester

    Жыл бұрын

    I’m pretty disappointed by this video, but I guess this is just a case of language evolving. “Lizard brain” has become a more casual term compared to its old definition. Most of us are familiar with the new definition and didn’t know the history behind it. So… I feel misled by the title, even if it is accurate. Actually, now I’m wondering if we’re the right audience for the actual explanation in the video.

  • @adamhbrennan
    @adamhbrennan Жыл бұрын

    There is no teleological cause behind evolution (except perhaps human teleological causes in cases of selective breeding); the questions of “why” could pertain more to evolutionary pressures behind various adaptations/trajectories (at particular points in time), and questions of “how” could pertain more to the mechanisms through which evolution occurs.

  • @Videoneer
    @Videoneer5 ай бұрын

    Large corporations already planning layoffs seeing that a brain is expensive.

  • @northernbrother1258
    @northernbrother1258 Жыл бұрын

    OK sure...but when we lay people say lizard brain we don't mean we literally have a lizard's brain, we mean our primordial brain we inherited from our ancient non-human ancestors...maybe that's incorrect, too...but that's what we mean. 🥴

  • @freedombro6502

    @freedombro6502

    Жыл бұрын

    They don't get humor and can't read between the lines .

  • @Aaron.Thomas

    @Aaron.Thomas

    Жыл бұрын

    That's literally they idea they're debunking. you didnt inherit a primordial brain from non human ancestors, as that implies they themselves inherited a primordial brain from their ancestors, and so on and so on until oh, we all inherited part of our brain from lizards. no. each organism has a brain that wired and rewired through every single generation a new thing, wired for that organism, and no part of it, no section is a primordial part. every generation, every organism has a brain that is wired for that organism, and not some other organism, not a lizard, not a primordial ancestor, not a fish, just that organism.

  • @CoryAlbrecht
    @CoryAlbrecht Жыл бұрын

    Semantic strawman. Yes, people say "lizard brain", but we know that they're not literally referring to lizards, they're referring to the reptile ancestors of mammals. We can even see this in the newspaper clipping shown at about 2:15 in, that say "reptiles" and not "lizards". Also, reptiles and mammals did not evolve from fish. Mammals evolved from reptiles, reptiles evolved from amphibians, and amphibians evolved from bony fishes. So, she uses a misleading strawman, and gets the basics of The evolutionary tree wrong, so how am I supposed to trust anything else she says?

  • @Larry00000
    @Larry000003 ай бұрын

    There may be an important difference between the parts of neural systems that have pre-programmed less-changeable pathways created by ancestral DNA, and the neural systems that can change and store memory...possibly related to differences in synapse chemistry. Knowing how this works might help to improve human behavior and learning.

  • @hn6187
    @hn6187 Жыл бұрын

    More fun evolutionary sorry is that we have big brains to impress our mates, and ideal mate. Hunting and avoiding hunters isn't actually that big a deal, in space-time measures, but monkeying around with others is a constant preoccupation. Still think there's something to be gained by noticing the way the anatomy of the brain is organised about different levels of 'abstraction'.

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