Partial Lecture Schedule for 2020
Feb 7-9, 2020 - Menlo Park, CA - SciFoo
Jul 26-30, 2020 - Vancouver, Canada - Attending TED 2020 2020
Aug 18, 2020 - Wisconsin Public Radio @ 1pm PT
Aug 20, 2020 - Estee Lauder Technology Council
Aug 24, 2020 - Edinburgh Book Festival - Livewired
Aug 25, 2020 - Google Arts & Culture - Livewired
Aug 25, 2020 - Secret Science Club - Livewired
Aug 26, 2020 - Reddit IAMA @ 11:30am - 1pm PT - Livewired
Aug 27, 2020 - Rotman School, University of Toronto Canada - Livewired
Aug 31, 2020 - How To Academy - Livewired
Sep 1, 2020 - Andrew Huberman Lab - Instagram Live
Sep 1, 2020 - Brazos Book Store - Livewired
Sep 2, 2020 - R Upskill
Sep 2, 2020 - Futures Podcast Live - Livewired
Sep 2, 2020 - Politics & Prose - Livewired
Sep 7, 2020 - 5x15 - Livewired
Sep 9, 2020 - Claremont, CA - Claremont McKenna College
Sep 24, 2020 - Bookshop Santa Cruz
Sep 28, 2020 - American Brain Foundation
Oct 20, 2020 - Townhall Seattle - Virtual Speaker Series - Brain Health
Nov 4, 2020 - Microsoft - Bing Signature Learning Program 2020
Nov 19, 2020 - TATA Literature Live: Quantum Mind with Sir Roger Penrose
Nov 21, 2020 - Mumbai Literary Festival
Dec 2, 2020 - Google
Oct 27, 2021 - Corvallis, OR - Oregon State University Provost’s Lecture Series
Click on "Next" to see an archive of previous lectures
Our ignorance of the cosmos is too vast to commit to atheism, and yet we know too much to commit to a particular religion. A third position, agnosticism, is often an uninteresting stance in which a person simply questions whether his traditional religious story is true or not true. I call myself a possibilian. Find out why.
A 26 week New York Times bestseller, Incognito was named a Best Book of the Year by both Amazon and Goodreads. For a taste of the book, see a review in the Wall Street Journal, listen to a conversation on NPR's Fresh Air, or watch a video dialog with Wired Magazine. Reading Incognito now? We'd love to hear feedback!
See David Eagleman's TED talk entitled "Can we create new senses for humans?"
Read a profile of David in The New Yorker: The Possibilian: What a brush with death taught David Eagleman about the mysteries of time and the brain by Burkhard Bilger.