Time: The Neuroscience of the Self

The Neuroscience of the Self

ADD TIME ON GOOGLE

by

Masud Husain

Masud Husain is a professor of cognitive neuroscience at Oxford and the author of “Our Brains, Our Selves.”

Apr 15, 2026 4:56 PM IST

PM Images—Getty Images

What makes up our sense of self has been an important focus of discussion for centuries. It has vexed philosophers and thinkers who have debated what the self is—and is not—with passion. A few years ago, neuroscientists also entered the fray. Some, such as the neuroscientist and philosopher Georg Nothoff, even attempted to locate the self within the brain. Early efforts were motivated by an intuitive question: if we can localize vision, language, and motor control, why not the self?

With the rise of functional brain imaging in the 1990s, neuroscientists began designing experiments that contrasted self-referential mental states with non-self states. In the scanner, people might be asked to judge whether adjectives applied well to themselves or others—questions such as, “Am I honest?” These studies repeatedly identified activity along the cortical midline from front to back. Because these regions were more active when people thought about themselves than when they performed externally focused tasks, some researchers proposed that they formed a neural core of the self.

This idea gained further traction with the discovery of the so-called “default mode network” of brain regions—a set of interconnected brain areas that become active when the mind is at rest, engaged in introspection, retrieving memories from one’s past, or imagining one’s future. Because these mental activities feel intimately tied to selfhood, this collection of brain areas was sometimes described loosely as the brain’s “self network.” However, problems with this interpretation soon became apparent.

First, the same regions are active during many cognitive tasks that are not necessarily about the self. Second, different kinds of “self” tasks activated overlapping but not identical patterns of brain regions within the network. These findings led many researchers to conclude that what was being localized was not the self, but processes related to self-reference: self-evaluation, autobiographical recall, perspective-taking, and narrative construction. The consensus is that the self has not been localized by these sorts of brain scanning studies.

This comes as no surprise to many people. Daniel Dennett, the philosopher, famously argued that searching for the self in the brain was a category mistake, akin to searching for the center of gravity of an object. The self has no physical properties. It is not a real thing but a theorist’s fiction. “No one has ever seen or ever will see a center of gravity. As David Hume noted, no one has ever seen a self, either,” Dennett proclaimed. The self, according to Dennett, is a useful abstraction: a narrative construct that we create to explain who we are, not a biological object waiting to be found. It emerges from the stories we tell— to ourselves and to others—about our actions, beliefs, intentions, and experiences. It is illusory.

Dennett was comfortable to consider the self to be useful fiction. “We are all virtuoso novelists,” he quipped. “We try to make all of our material cohere into a single good story. And that story is our autobiography. The chief fictional character at the center of that autobiography is one’s self.” His theory rejected the idea of a single, unified “theatre” in the brain where experiences are somehow presented to an inner observer – the self. Instead, Dennett proposed that what we call conscious experience of the self is actually the outcome of many parallel, distributed, and competing neural processes—multiple drafts”—none of which is intrinsically privileged as the final version.

Dennett’s views align closely with those of the MIT AI pioneer Marvin Minsky, who argued that the self is simply the emergent result of many interacting brain processes. For Minsky, this “Society of Mind” is a collection of semi-independent agents—simple mechanisms that each do one small thing well, such as an aspect of perception, memory, or language. These agents or modules are not intelligent in themselves. They don’t understand, decide, or reflect. Nor is there any form of central controller. Control is distributed. Each module performs a limited function. Intelligent behavior arises from their coordination. Minsky was deliberately opposing the intuitive idea that somewhere in the brain there must be a unitary thinker—a captain of the ship. There is no such master agent, according to him.

These ideas have had great influence but also attracted fire. One important criticism of the view of the self as a fictional narrative and an emergent property of multiple, independent brain processes is that this does not explain why the self feels singular, not fragmented. As the NYU philosopher David Chalmers has argued, these models don’t explain the experience of being a unified self – the first-person subjective experience of being who we are. They deal with the “easy problem” of how cognitive functions operate in the brain, but not the “hard problem” of conscious experience. Why and how is any of this brain processing accompanied by subjective experience, such as what it feels like to see red, feel pain, or even be “oneself”? No amount of reductionist explanation, Chalmers argues, logically entails the existence of experience. You could, in principle, explain everything the brain does and still be left with this question about the self unanswered.

One important perspective on these issues comes from another side of neuroscience: the study of people who develop brain disorders. What happens if one part of the “Society of Mind” that normally underpins the self becomes dysfunctional? What is the first-person experience then? Researchers have been observing what happens to people who have suffered a stroke or developed a neurodegenerative condition such as Alzheimer’s disease. Some of these individuals can have highly focal impairment, limited to one cognitive process or module. They may, for example, have difficulty with visual perception, paying attention, retrieving information from memory, comprehending language, understanding concepts, and being motivated, and so on. 

Michael, for example, is a patient who came to see me in my clinic because he was worried about his increasing difficulty in finding the right word in conversation. To begin with, he seemed to be highly articulate, and it was difficult to appreciate what he was concerned about. As we talked more though, it began to be evident that he didn’t understand the meaning of some words that he really should know. When we got onto the topic of sports, for example, he told me he used to play rugby, but he couldn’t understand what I meant when I asked him which position he used to play in the team.

Through careful assessment, it became clear that Michael was suffering from a highly limited impairment in semantics—understanding the meaning of words and the concepts that are attached to them. His diagnosis was semantic dementia, an unusual neurodegenerative condition. Slowly over time, Michael’s difficulty with semantics began to have a greater impact. He didn’t understand jokes and became less inclined to talk. His friends thought that he’d lost his sense of humor and came to visit him less. He became more isolated from them and subsequently members of his family, even when they were aware of his diagnosis.

What do stories such as Michael’s reveal about our selves? At one level, they demonstrate that the self can be altered. People behave differently if their semantics and understanding of concepts are eroded. Similarly, for individuals whose perception might be impaired, start to experience visual hallucinations, have difficulty recalling information, or become disinhibited in their behavior. All these types of dysfunction in a limited cognitive module can lead to profound changes in a person’s identity. They can also alter how they appear to others and have a huge impact on their social identity and how they fit in their social circle. Crucially, though, none of these people lose their entire sense of self through the loss of any one cognitive module. They still have a first-person perspective on the fact that they are a person with a sense of self.

In this way, these neurological observations support the view that the self is not housed in one particular brain region, but rather emerges from the activities of a distributed constellation of cognitive modules. Focal brain disruption to one of these does not eliminate the self. It selectively alters it. Very basic brain functions clearly play a key role in determining who we are—our personal identity. They are integral parts of the “Society of the Mind” that creates our self. But they are also crucial to keeping us within society through our social identity. First-person experiences can continue after brain damage, although those experiences are different. However, although we can explain what is lost or disrupted (perception, memory, language, concepts, and so on), we don’t have a definitive answer to what makes up the self. 

And we don’t know whether philosophy, neuroscience, or both will be the discipline that helps us answer this question once and for all.

TIME Ideas hosts the world’s leading voices, providing commentary on events in news, society, and culture. We welcome outside contributions. Opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect the views of TIME editors.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Richard D. Wolff: “The Blockade: A Blockheaded Strategy” Dated April 15, 2026

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

The Harvard Gazette: What makes a good student

makes a good student 

Students walking on a line drawn by a pencil.
Illustration by Liz Zonarich/Harvard Staff

Sy Boles

Harvard Staff Writer

April 14, 2026 long read

Inner drive, integrity, open-mindedness among qualities highlighted by faculty

Many of us spend years or even decades of our lives as students, and some of us are better at it than others. We asked professors and lecturers from around Harvard University to share the qualities and practices they notice in their best students. Get out a pen and paper: You’ll want to take notes. 


Integrity matters

I’ve had the good fortune of working with many wonderful students in my time here. In my experience, the best students have had four qualities. 

The first and most important is a genuine, deep, persistent curiosity that extends beyond the student’s core area of study. Curiosity like this is really a love of learning and discovery, in a very broad sense, and it gives students the motivation to keep going even when the material gets difficult, which it always eventually does. This expansive kind of curiosity also helps students make nontrivial connections that can lead to novel insights and breakthroughs.

The second is rigorous thinking, of the kind taught in a serious philosophy course. Students who can formulate their ideas as carefully reasoned arguments, from clearly stated premises to precisely argued conclusions, are not only more likely to understand what they’re doing, identify hidden assumptions, make new discoveries, and avoid making mistakes, but are better at teaching and communicating their ideas to others.

The third is integrity. My best students are honorable. They hold themselves to high moral standards, do their work honestly, and earn the trust and respect of their peers and colleagues. These students don’t cheat or take ethical shortcuts, especially the sorts of ethical shortcuts that don’t seem like a big deal or that seem widespread.

The fourth and last is knowing when what they’ve done is enough. It’s easy for curious, rigorous, honorable students to go down rabbit holes or never manage to finish projects. It’s difficult to develop a sense for when it’s time to conclude a project and move on to the next one — but it’s a crucial skill, and one well worth working on.

— Jacob Barandes, senior preceptor in physics and associated faculty in philosophy in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences


Process-oriented

One of the key skills you need as a medical student is prioritizing information. Often when medical students struggle, they are trying to remember everything. This comes from a place of deep caring, a commitment to their future patients. In these moments I try to talk with the students about the differences in how experts and novices process information. Novices first need to build scaffolding for the new information — they need to focus on the connections and bigger picture — before they can add all the details. Experts can take in details much more quickly. They already have a lot of knowledge to connect the new information with, so it “sticks” with much less effort. Building that scaffolding is hard, slow work, and it may feel like you are missing out in the moment. I encourage students to examine their relative “expert-novice status” on any topic and adapt their study strategies and expectations of themselves accordingly.

— Henrike C. Besche, director of education at the Harvard-MIT Program in Health Sciences and Technology


Drive defines them

The quality I’ve found most consistently in good students is inner drive. They don’t need an external push; they’re motivated by a genuine desire to understand rather than just to perform well on an assignment or exam. That kind of drive is hard to teach, but when it’s there, everything else tends to follow.

“They don’t need an external push; they’re motivated by a genuine desire to understand rather than just to perform well on an assignment or exam.”

Tied to that drive is genuine curiosity. Good students want to know how things work and why. They ask deeper questions and follow threads that go beyond what’s strictly required. That curiosity is what keeps them engaged when the work gets challenging — and in physics, it will get challenging. That’s where perseverance and resiliency become essential.

— Cora Dvorkin, professor of physics in the FAS


Passion and purpose

I like to draw a distinction between what it means to be a good student versus a good learner. I often see kids, even young ones, who have learned what’s expected of them in school and they aim to perform well in that context: They know how to be organized; they have beautiful binders; they get good grades. But too often these kids get to the end of high school, or maybe even college, and they’re asking, “What have I really learned?” Much of what they have learned doesn’t transfer to their lives beyond school.

Good learners, by contrast, are motivated by their passion for finding out. They are willing to take risks and work at “learning edges.” They don’t play it safe; they learn from both their successes and their failures. They’re mastery-oriented, which means they see intelligence as learnable, which it absolutely is. They have a purpose for what they want to do — the changes they want to create in the world — so they’re motivated to develop the skills they need to make those changes. Interestingly, sometimes they have a disregard for what it means to be a “good student” as they make choices in favor of their learning over grades, requirements, tests, etc. 

In the work I do at the Next Level Lab, we encourage learners to be agentive, but beyond that, we teach people how to use their agency to leverage their contexts toward their best learning and performance. This includes looking for malleability, where possible, in their social, emotional, technological, cognitive, and physical environments. I have had students physically rearrange their workspaces to support their attention and perception. Often in schools, teachers are the ones creating contexts that are conducive to learning, but it’s the students who need to learn this. They’re not here to please their teachers. They need to do it for themselves. 

 Tina Grotzer, faculty and principal research scientist in education at the Harvard Graduate School of Education


The right questions, on repeat

In law, as in the University more generally, we are teaching students to think about the world in a different way than they have before. We are teaching methods, perspectives, and techniques in addition to imparting detailed knowledge. The good students ask questions — and keep asking them. They see a phrase in a legal opinion, or hear something the professor has said, and want to know more. They are conscious that no matter how much they know, there are more questions to ask. And they see the project of university learning as not simply the validation of their preexisting political and ideological beliefs, nor the balancing of different ideological or political views in a stilted discussion, but rather, the shifting of one’s perspective. Good students work hard and persevere. They aren’t afraid to come see the professor at the end of class to say they don’t understand something. My students have gone on to be professors, big city mayors, members of Congress. But the ones I remember best, and who have impressed me the most, are the curious ones. They always want to know what they don’t know.

— Kenneth W. Mack, Lawrence D. Biele Professor of Law and affiliate professor of history at Harvard Law School 


Seeing what others miss

The qualities I’ve noticed that support success in design begin with a sharpened attention and a willingness to commit to closely reading things in the world. The form of attention that I refer to enables students who possess it to pick up on details that others might miss. The capacity to lock in and sustain a close read of these pickups unfolds new details and questions that can be explored and advanced through iterative thinking, visualizing, and making — the methods of design. 

Most importantly, these traits allow the student who wields them to first problem-set, and then to problem-solve — dual actions that define design. First: What is the right question to ask? Followed by: What material, scale, and making technique is best suited to exploring possible solutions to that question? 

These traits can be cultivated with knowledge of their power and with practice — things that are regularly taught, talked about, and then put into play in the design studio.

— Megan Panzano, senior director of early design education and lecturer in architecture at the Harvard Graduate School of Design


Deep curiosity

There is an old story in medical education about what the professor tells their students on the first day of class: “Half of what we will be teaching you in the next four years will be found to be wrong in 20 years; the only problem is that we don’t know which half.” While this is probably not unique to medicine, the field continues to evolve at an incredible pace. Given the nature of medical practice, what kind of student do I want? What kind of student will make the best doctor not just on the day they graduate school, but decades later as well?

“What kind of student will make the best doctor not just on the day they graduate school, but decades later as well?”

For me, curiosity is the key ingredient. Curiosity to keep asking questions, to want to know not just what to do, but why one should do that. Curiosity about how things work. Why did the blood pressure fall? Why did the chest pain change? How is this shortness of breath different from what the patient experienced in the past? Not only is curiosity the key to understanding human biology, it is also the key to being a humanistic physician. One needs to be curious about the patient sitting before you. Who are you? What is important to you? How do we make a decision on your care that is consistent with your values?

Mix curiosity with the humility to admit that none of us has all the answers and the determination to always get better at your craft, and you have the right student.

— Richard M. Schwartzstein, Ellen and Melvin Gordon Distinguished Professor of Medicine and Medical Education, Harvard Medical School


Never indifferent

Each student is different, and so are their learning styles and study habits. The hallmark of a good student is a commitment to learning rather than solely achieving high grades. Good students demonstrate critical, analytical, and imaginative thinking. They abhor both laziness and indifference to learning. Such students are organized, prepared, and diligent, and they pay close attention in class. They consider alternative viewpoints while remaining open-minded, and are receptive to feedback without being defensive. Over time, good students develop a growth mindset, fostering healthy curiosity and a desire to acquire new knowledge. They reflect on the significance of mistakes, move beyond them, and extend grace to themselves. Good students recognize preparation and curiosity as essential virtues. They seek assistance promptly and use professors’ office hours effectively. Motivated by setting and achieving learning goals, good students are also good citizens because they contribute positively to the learning environment as responsible members of the academic community.

— Dehlia Umunna, clinical professor of law, Harvard Law School 


Up for an argument

A good student is defined by a willingness to engage with perspectives different from their own. In government, we deal with questions that are often contested and rarely settled. The strongest students take disagreement seriously: They listen carefully, try to understand where others are coming from, and respond thoughtfully rather than reactively. They are open to revising their views when the evidence points them in a new direction, while still expressing their own arguments with clarity and respect.

— Yuhua Wang, Ford Foundation Professor of Modern China Studies and Harvard College Professor, FAS

Share this article

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Axios: Outgunned at home


Axios AM
By Mike Allen · Apr 15, 2026
 Hello, Tax Day! Smart Brevity™ count: 1,291 words … 5 mins. Thanks to Noah Bressner for orchestrating. Edited by Andrew Pantazi and Bill Kole. If you’re in D.C. today: Join us at 7:30 a.m. for our blockbuster Axios News Shapers event. I’ll interview Sen. Dave McCormick (R-Pa.). We’ll also talk with Kevin Hassett, Sen. Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.) & more. RSVP.
 
 
1 big thing: Outgunned at home
 
Illustration of a swarm of drones surrounding the State of Liberty's torch.
Illustration: Lindsey Bailey/Axios
 
A Pentagon competition to build out a killer drone fleet ended with a small British company crushing American contractors on their own turf, Axios Future of Defense author Colin Demarest writes.

Why it matters: The Defense Department’s Drone Dominance push is designed to arm American troops with expendable drones on a massive scale in a few short years. It’s also a tacit admission of how ill-prepared the U.S. is to match some combat conditions seen overseas: Roughly 75% of casualties in the Russia–Ukraine war are caused by drones.🔎 

Zoom in: Skycutter — the British company with frontline Ukraine experience — entered the Shrike 10-F, a 10-inch drone that can be operated via fiber optic cable to counter electronic jamming and spoofing.

The drone is the result of collaboration with SkyFall, a Ukrainian outfit.

“They make one every 23 seconds, 123,000 units per month,” Vincent Gardner, Skycutter’s operations director, told Axios. “We redesigned it with them to exclude any Chinese parts or components.”

Gardner was blunt: “A lot of people came with, I would argue, quite overengineered solutions. … These drones, they’re like mechanical wasps. 

The result: It was a blowout. Skycutter scored an overall 99.3 at an attack drone fly-off at Fort Benning in Georgia. In second was Neros, a Southern California startup, at 87.5.

Skycutter, which has a manufacturing footprint in Atlanta, is now under contract for more than 2,500 drones. It plans to boost U.S. manufacturing in the near term.Photo: Presidential Office of Ukraine🔮 

Future of war: Here’s another story that caught Colin’s attention …

viral video is making the rounds of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky bragging about taking a Russian position with only robots and drones.

No human soldiers.Inside the story: Ukraine, outmanned and outgunned by Russia, has spun up a sci-fi-style defense industry.

Zelensky said Ukrainian ground robots carried out more than 22,000 missions in just three months.

Frontline footage from the robots helps fuel fundraising for cheap drones and interceptors.More on the “Gauntlet” … Get Axios Future of Defense.
Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Steve Hanke on X: US Foreign Military Bases. Germany has 118 US military bases in Germany

Steve Hanke

@steve_hanke

·

The US has 118 military bases in Germany. That’s the highest concentration of US bases in a foreign country. In Germany, Uncle Sam runs the show.

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

The Ezra Klein Show: Reckoning With Israel’s ‘One State Reality’

Apr 14, 2026

The Ezra Klein Show

For decades, most discussions of Israel and Palestine were framed around the eventual creation of a two-state solution. That effort has been dead for years. What has emerged in its place is what the political scientists Marc Lynch and Shibley Telhami call the “one-state reality.” Their book on this — edited with Michael Barnett and Nathan Brown — came out before Oct. 7, 2023. Since Oct. 7, that reality has become further entrenched: There’s been a record pace of settlement construction in the West Bank. Israel now occupies more than half the territory of Gaza. And Israel’s push into Lebanon has displaced more than a million people. So what does it mean to reckon with Israel’s one-state reality — to see the facts on the ground rather than the frames of the past? Shibley Telhami is the Anwar Sadat professor for peace and development at the University of Maryland, College Park. Marc Lynch is the director of the Project on Middle East Political Science at George Washington University. Lynch is the author, most recently, of “America’s Middle East: The Ruination of a Region.” 0:00 Intro 7:16 One-state reality 14:52 Netanyahu’s messaging 25:28 After Oct. 7 43:36 Gaza after the cease-fire 53:03 Israel’s strategy on Iran 58:49 What’s happening in Lebanon 1:13:46 The one-state reality now 1:22:24 U.S. support for Israel 1:27:24 Book recommendations Read the full transcript here: https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/14/op… Watch more on ‪@EzraKleinShow‬ Thoughts? Guest suggestions? Email us at ezrakleinshow@nytimes.com. You can find transcripts (posted midday) and more episodes of “The Ezra Klein Show” at nytimes.com/ezra-klein-podcast. Book recommendations from all our guests are listed at https://www.nytimes.com/article/ezra-… Leo Correa/Associated Press

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Just Jay: Our Lord meets the Pope meme

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

World’s Largest Oil Chokepoints

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Iran Answers Trump’s Blockade with a LEGO Diss Track

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment

Current Report: Polish MP Konrad Berkowicz displayed an altered Israeli flag in parliament featuring a swastika …

Posted in Uncategorized | Leave a comment