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The Michael Shermer Show

The Emergent Mind: From Ant Colonies to Human Thought to Artificial Intelligence

The Michael Shermer Show

Michael Shermer

Natural Sciences, Science

4.31K Ratings

🗓️ 6 December 2025

⏱️ 105 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode of The Michael Shermer Show, Michael sits down with two giants of mind and machine science: Jay McClelland, one of the founders of modern neural networks, and Gaurav Suri, computational neuroscientist and director of the RAD Lab.

Drawing from decades of research, they walk us through the revolution from behaviorism to cognitive psychology to modern neuroscience, and why simple interacting units can give rise to astonishingly complex behaviors. 

From why we perceive letters differently in context to how memory works, why consciousness remains baffling, and what AI is (and isn't) actually doing, this episode dives deep into the mechanics of all levels of thought, mind, and even consciousness.

Jay McClelland is a professor of psychology and of computer science and linguistics at Stanford University. He is one of the most influential and well-known cognitive scientists of the past century. He is the founder of the study of artificial neural networks, and his publications have been cited more than 100,000 times. He is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and a Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy.

Gaurav Suri is an associate professor of psychology at San Francisco State University. He is a computational neuroscientist and an experimental psychologist. He is the director of RADLab, where he studies the mechanisms that shape motivated action and decision making. He is the co-author of the prize-winning novel A Certain Ambiguity and several dozen influential research papers.  

Their new book is The Emergent Mind: How Intelligence Arises in People and Machines.

Transcript

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0:00.0

When I started in this field, I was befuddled by consciousness, and I remained befuddled by consciousness, right?

0:05.8

So the heart problem of consciousness is how is it possible that transfer of sodium, potassium, and other ions across membranes can lead to the subjective experience of me looking at you?

0:15.5

Like, I open my eyes and I'm surrounded by this 3D movie.

0:18.3

Where's the movie coming from?

0:19.7

It's not playing in my head because nobody's watching anything in my head.

0:22.8

All I have are patterns of electricity, and yet I have the subjective experience.

0:26.7

Can you imagine our brains are no longer the smartest thing on the planet, and what will that

0:31.0

mean for humanity?

0:32.2

There's ways in which we're already there in terms of the answer to your question.

0:36.4

So there are artificial, somewhat neural

0:38.9

network-based systems that are now capable of learning through self-play, how to find

0:45.5

strategies that no human being ever discovered for playing games like chess or go, and that

0:51.3

it's sort of hard to imagine any sort of human being with our biological limitations,

0:56.9

which in many ways are very different from the limitations of artificial systems,

1:02.5

catching up with those kinds of artificial systems.

1:06.2

So I don't think that it's like a singularity or not.

1:12.7

I think it's more like there's many, many ways in which machines are going to have capabilities

1:17.8

and there's many, many ways in which humans have capabilities.

1:20.9

I think it's extremely likely that there won't be any particular capabilities that we have

1:25.4

that machines can't have.

1:26.5

We conceive the mind as an emergent phenomenon.

1:30.2

What does emergence mean?

...

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