Great simplification pulsing lines

Ep 85  |  Iain McGilchrist

Iain McGilchrist: “Wisdom, Nature, and the Brain”

Check out this podcast

TGS85 Iain McGilchrist The Great Simplification

Show Summary

On this episode, literary scholar and psychiatrist Iain McGilchrist joins Nate to discuss the way modern culture teaches and encourages us to use – and not use – the two lobes of our brains. While most functions require the use of both sides of our brains, each side is specially attuned to see and interact with the world in certain ways: the left side acts as a narrow problem solving executor, while the right side is a broadly open contextualizer. What happens when we humans – in aggregate – become imbalanced in our use of these two critical functions? Have we divided the Earth into pieces to be optimized rather than a whole (which we’re a part of) to be stewarded? Can we learn to bring these two components of our brains back into balance and in turn heal fractures in ourselves, and ultimately in our communities, Earth, and her ecosystems?

About Iain McGilchrist

Dr. Iain McGilchrist is a Quondam Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford, an Associate Fellow of Green Templeton College, Oxford, a Fellow of the Royal College of Psychiatrists, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, and former Consultant Psychiatrist and Clinical Director at the Bethlem Royal & Maudsley Hospital, London. He has been a Research Fellow in neuroimaging at Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore and a Fellow of the Institute of Advanced Studies in Stellenbosch. He has published original articles and research papers in a wide range of publications on topics in literature, philosophy, medicine and psychiatry. He is the author of a number of books, but is best-known for The Master and his Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World (2009); and his book on neuroscience, epistemology and ontology called The Matter with Things: Our Brains, Our Delusions and the Unmaking of the World (2021).

In French, we have a motto that says that a simple drawing is often better than a long explanation. Jean-Marc Jancovici Carbone 4 President

That’s very understandable because with left atmosphere thinking, one of the problems is that you see everything as a series of problems that must have solutions. Iain McGilchrist Neuroscientist and Philosopher

We can’t have hundreds and hundreds of real relationships that are healthy because that requires time and effort and full attention and awareness of being in real relationship and conversation with the other human. Nate Hagens Director of ISEOF

This is the crux of the whole problem. Individual parts of nature are more valuable than the biocomplexity of nature. Thomas Crowther Founder Restor

Show Notes & Links to Learn More

00:00 – Iain McGilchrist InfoThe Master and His Emissary, and The Matter with Things

03:02 – Peter Whybrow + TGS Episode

03:25 – Daniel Schmachteberger + TGS Episodes

04:58 – The brain is divided into asymmetrical hemispheres

05:42 – Corpus Callosum 

10:02 – Dunning-Kruger Effect

15:15 – Daniel Schmachtenberger episode on AI

16:04 – Humans are social animals and altruistic

16:20 – Human evolution has been about cooperation and competition together

20:28 – Alfred North Whitehead

23:35 – Animist religions

23:46 – Nate’s work on the Superorganism

24:06 – Agricultural Revolution

26:01 – Pantheism

27:12 – Transcranial magnetic stimulation

29:55 – Disproved thinking on left vs right hemispheres

32:08 – Kretschmer 

33:50 – Ayahuasca and other psychedelics

34:05 – Frontal Lobe

35:35 – Pharmaceutical involvement in promotion of psychedelics 

40:29 – Dispositional Belief

42:05 – GK Chesterton

44:38 – Patrick OphulsImmoderate Greatness + TGS Episode

46:08 – TaoismBuddhismVedanta

47:33 – Humans evolved to value fitness more than truth

47:45 – Nate’s Reality 101 course

56:03 – Dan Kahneman

58:10 – Rates of Stress and Trauma

1:01:57 – Feldenkrais Method

1:02:21 – Viktor Frankl

1:05:17 – Tomas Björkman – Inner Development Goals

1:07:45 – Mindfulness

1:23:38 – The rise of thinking of the brain as a computer

1:28:49 – Examination (Prize) Fellowship of All Souls

1:29:50 – The greatest discoveries came when hitting a dead end

1:36:29 – Mechanistic Determinism

1:37:40 – Managerial culture that began in the 80s

1:39:17 – HeraclitusAlan Watts

1:41:44 – Onondaga of the Iroquois

1:44:41 – Homo Habilis

1:48:44 – St. Paul

Download transcript
Back to episodes
Moving from Apathy to ActionWith Skye Cielita Flor and John SeedThe Great SimplificationEp 17 | Skye Cielita Flor and John Seed

When facing the realities of our world, the urge to drown in grief or shut down into apathy is becoming more and more common. As we are flooded with information and global predicaments outside of our control, overwhelm can set in, affecting our energy, efficacy, and even our ability to care. But what if facing our grief is actually the pathway to increasing our capacity to stay connected to and work on the things that matter most to us? What tools, practices, or rituals could we use to help us begin to metabolize our grief?

Watch nowJul 9, 2025
Algorithmic CancerWith Connor LeahyThe Great SimplificationEp 184 | Connor Leahy

Recently, the risks about Artificial Intelligence and the need for ‘alignment’ have been flooding our cultural discourse – with Artificial Super Intelligence acting as both the most promising goal and most pressing threat. But amid the moral debate, there’s been surprisingly little attention paid to a basic question: do we even have the technical capability to guide where any of this is headed? And if not, should we slow the pace of innovation until we better understand how these complex systems actually work?

Watch nowJun 25, 2025
Rod SchoonoverThe National Security Risks We’re Not Prepared ForWith Rod SchoonoverThe Great SimplificationEp 183 | Rod Schoonover

National security concerns have been the invisible hand guiding governance throughout recorded history. In the 20th century, it was defined by a country versus country dynamic: whichever nation was the strongest and most strategic was also the safest. But today, our biggest national security threats don’t come from opposing nations – they are “actorless threats” that emerge from the breakdown of the complex systems we all depend on – from the stability of our planetary systems to our intricately complex and fragile global supply chains. In this unprecedented landscape, what is required of us in order to keep our citizens safe?

Watch nowJun 18, 2025

Subscribe to our Substack

Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.

The Institute for the Study of Energy and Our Future (ISEOF) is a 501(c)(3) non-profit corporation, founded in 2008, that conducts research and educates the public about energy issues and their impact on society.

Support our work
Get in touch
x