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New York Times bestseller
IncognitoA 15 week New York Times bestseller, Incognito was named a Best Book of 2011 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 dialog with Wired Magazine. Reading Incognito now? We'd love to hear feedback!

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Selected articles by David Eagleman

Ceaseless Reinvention Leads to Overlapping Solutions. Edge. 2012.

The Mystery of Expertise. The Week Magazine. 2011.

Your Brain Knows More Than you Realize. Discover Magazine. 2011.

Breivik's Brain. Published in The Independent (UK), NZZ am Sonntag (Switzerland), and Politiken (Denmark). 2011.

The Brain on Trial. The Atlantic Monthly. 2011.

Turning our Minds to the Law. The Telegraph. 2011.

The Human Brain Runs on Conflict. Wired. 2011.

The Umwelt. Edge. 2011.

Six Ways the Internet Will Save Civilisation. Wired. 2010.

The Founding Mothers: An ode to my matriarchs, every last one.  Slate Magazine.  2010.

Why I Am a Possibilian. New Scientist. 2010.

Six Ways the Internet May Save Civilization. Edge. 2010.

Book review of Rebecca Goldstein's 36 Arguments for the Existence of GodBarnes and Noble Review. 2010.

America on Deadline.  New York Times.  2009.

Brain Time. In What's Next? Dispatches on the Future of Science. 2009.

Silicon Immortality: Downloading Consciousness into Computers. Edge. 2009.

Book review of Eva Hoffman's TimeTime Isn't What it Used to BeNew Scientist.

Neuroscience and the Law. Houston Lawyer. 2008.

Ten Unsolved Mysteries of the Brain.  Discover Magazine, cover story. 2007.

A Brief History of Deathswitches. Nature. 2006. 

Remembering a Trail Blazer - Francis Crick. UT-Houston Medicine Magazine. 2004

 

For a listing of academic science publications, see EaglemanLab.net.

 

Six ways the internet will save civilisation