25 February 2008
The human brain: evolving toward kindness?
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In the midst of the current turmoil of environmental degradation and intra-species violence, are we about to self-destruct? Or are we on the brink of a radical transformation as a species? Physician Leonard Shlain finds hope in his studies of the genius of Leonardo Da Vinci, and its expression in both art and science.
According to Dr. Shlain, that reflects an extraordinary level of interaction between the left and right brain. It may also be indicative of a type of brain activity that makes us less prone to violence. For while it served us well to be hardwired for cold-blooded killing when we hunted mastodons on the savannahs, Dr. Shlain wonders, "Is the present arrangement of our brains an adaptation that is no longer advantageous to us? Is the extreme cruelty, the aggression that our split brains gave us, does that now make us a creature that is endangering themselves and all the others?" He suggests that Leonardo's brain may have been a harbinger of where our species is headed on the evolutionary path. It's a hopeful notion given our propensity to fight among ourselves, and dominate other species and our planet to the point of devastation. Dr. Shlain explores all possibilities, and points to a wisdom in the patterns of uniqueness among individuals-just like Leonardo's-which suggest we may be about to shift into something much, much better.
Program #3221
