Ep 71: Why do our memories drift? Part2: Misremembering yourself | INNER COSMOS WITH DAVID EAGLEMAN

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  • Опубликовано: 11 сен 2024
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    Ep 71: Why do our memories drift? Part 2: Misremembering yourself | INNER COSMOS WITH DAVID EAGLEMAN
    Is your notion of yourself built on narrative that may or may not be accurate? If someone told you an entirely false story about yourself, could you come to believe it? What does that have to do with six people who spent over a decade in prison together for a crime they didn't commit? Join Eagleman for part 2 of some mind-blowing conclusions about your account of your own life.
    Original Air Date: August 12, 2024
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    Neuroscientist and author David Eagleman discusses how our brain interprets the world and what that means for us. Through storytelling, research, interviews, and experiments, David Eagleman tackles wild questions that illuminate new facets of our lives and our realities.
    New episodes weekly on iHeartRadio.
    TAGS: #DavidEagleman #InnerCosmoswithDavidEagleman #InnerCosmos #Science #Neuroscience #Neuroscientist #Eagleman

Комментарии • 10

  • @a.bodhichenevey1601
    @a.bodhichenevey1601 29 дней назад +2

    47 years in Military Reconnaissance (when DoD still thought it mattered) and Safety Services taught me to always be suspect of witnesses accounts of events. Even two-dimensional video doesn't provide either the contextual aspect of recorded events, nor the affectual content. Writing official reports also become a challenge where we must write only what we see with objectivity, which humans just cannot pull off. We want to write a story, when we have to write only "the facts, ma'am" without diagnoses and biases. This is why, upon retirement, I dived head-first into neurobiology of human behavior. SUPERB LECTURE!

  • @Phoeagdor
    @Phoeagdor 28 дней назад +1

    Wow, what an incredible story. Excellent 30 minutes to consider and expand on with others. You got me thinking Jacob's Ladder, Angel Heart, Memento and the river lethe that flows through our lives, our loves, veins and planes. Thank you for this, gracias.

  • @Gome.o
    @Gome.o 23 дня назад

    Reversal is a beautiful story.

  • @nzar75
    @nzar75 29 дней назад +1

    i've watched the Mind over murder , the helen wilson case , at that time i found out how our memory shapes our identity

  • @criscris5061
    @criscris5061 25 дней назад

    Frightening 😮

  • @ogungou9
    @ogungou9 Месяц назад +1

    This kind of manipulation is is often applied to "less serious cases", such as a husband having beaten his wife or his partner and abuse the children, by the judge or/and the social system which surrounds the victim...
    I have witnessed it with my sister and her violent partner ... My sister didn't fall for it because I was there as an external observer...
    Mind boggling.

  • @Jamzith
    @Jamzith 9 дней назад

    I'm starting to think what might be my true past look like. As i completely lost the trust in my personal memories after this video 😳

  • @muddyfriends4514
    @muddyfriends4514 13 дней назад

    I’m so interested to find out if your theory about our children’s memory being accurate because of pictures will turn out as you described. I notice the exact opposite, when it comes to memories based on pictures. There is so much photoshop, editing, angles, filters, and now AI inserting people in family photos that were never actually there. I look at my friends and family’s Social media(which I consider them telling the story of their life) and see a life that is not that close to what their life is actually like.
    I also find it so extremely interesting that you consider legacy media and stories widely shared more accurate than individual memories. Somehow they turn from people who inherently have bad memories, to grounding society in “reality”, because they called themselves a reporter. I think anyone can say anything, and reports are consistently false but get passed around by multiple “reporters” until most people assume it must be true. One of your main points during this podcast, from my perspective, was about how people have such bad memories and can be tricked so easily, but then you when straight into these other people are grounding you in reality.

  • @michelles9897
    @michelles9897 Месяц назад +1

    ☺️

  • @sanjanapalakodeti6936
    @sanjanapalakodeti6936 8 дней назад

    Connecting the incident of the 6 people believing they committed a crime, to your point about how our memories drift to align with our internal model, could it be said that the people who eventually believed they committed the crime had an internal model of themselves that was, on some level, capable of such an act? Would someone with strong, unwavering morals be relatively immune to this kind of memory manipulation?
    Would love to hear your thoughts on this.