yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Mental Time Travel: Your Brain Is Literally a Time Machine | Dean Buonamano / Big Think


2m read
·Nov 3, 2024

Processing might take a few minutes. Refresh later.

So consciousness is one of the deepest questions in science, and I think consciousness may very well be the deepest question and one of the deepest mysteries science has ever coped with. And this is one reason, by the way, that neuroscience is a very unique field in all of sciences.

So neuroscience is the only field in which the thing or the organ being studied is also doing the studying. Now this raises a number of potential concerns, right? Is that even possible? Can a device or an organ or a computational system understand itself? And that’s what we’re asking our brains to do when we’re faced with problems such as the nature of consciousness.

And the nature of consciousness is extremely hard to study for neuroscience and scientists because it’s very hard to measure. But some people have proposed or believe that one of the reasons consciousness evolved is to allow us to simulate future scenarios. And this relates to something called mental time travel.

So mental time travel is the ability that we have to relive past experiences. So we’ve all spent perhaps inordinate amounts of time daydreaming about the past or reliving things that have happened and giving those things alternate endings and simulating them in the past to see how we can use them in the future. We also spend a lot of time daydreaming about the future.

And importantly, our ability to mentally project ourselves into the future is perhaps one of the most valuable things, the most valuable cognitive abilities of our species. I think in many ways future-oriented time travel makes Homo sapiens sapien. It makes Homo sapiens wise because it’s what gives us the ability to engage in endeavors that other animals cannot do.

So if you think about something as a signature of our species: making a tool. Making a tool, carving a blade out of an obsidian stone, is something that implicitly requires a thought of the future. It means I’m doing something for something in the future. So I have a purpose for that.

Similarly, perhaps one of the most important inventions of humankind is agriculture. This notion of planting a seed today and reaping its benefits or assuring a source of food in the future is one thing that drove our species forward. And that again is something that requires mental time travel, that requires our ability to think in the distant future...

More Articles

View All
Multiplying complex numbers in polar form | Precalculus | Khan Academy
We’re given two different complex numbers here and we want to figure out what is the product. Pause this video and see if you can figure that out. All right, now let’s work on this together. So we know from the form that it’s written here that the modulu…
Khan Academy's Official Digital SAT Prep Webinar
Good afternoon, and welcome to preparing your school for the digital SAT webinar. We are so happy that you’re able to join us this afternoon to learn more about the new digital SAT and how KH Academy can help support your teachers, students, and community…
Squishy Robot Fingers: A Breakthrough for Underwater Science | National Geographic
We’re in the northern part of the Red Sea, and the reason we’re here is we’re trying to test out our squishy robot fingers for the first time in a reef. So we tested these squishy fingers in a swimming pool, and now we wanted to put them to the true test…
Adjectives and commas | Adjectives | Khan Academy
Hey Garans, hey Paige, hi David. Hey, so Paige, I went to the grocery store yesterday and I got this apple. Okay? I put it in the fridge, uh, and this morning when I opened the fridge, the apple was all like gross and sticky and mushy. I really want to w…
Tutankhamun's True Burial Chamber | Lost Treasures of Egypt
It’s always exciting. Sometimes there’s even between the workmen a bit of a competition: who will find first? While conservators move the painted walls to the storerooms for safekeeping, T spots something in the sand. We have a pillar, and I can see alrea…
How We Can Keep Plastics Out of Our Ocean | National Geographic
8 million metric tons of plastic trash enters the sea from land every year; the equivalent of five plastic bags filled with trash for every foot of coastline in the world. Across our ocean, plastic trash blows into circulation, dispersed almost everywhere…