Hallucinations and Faulty Memories

Published: Aug. 5, 2020, 1:39 a.m.

We can’t help but see things that don’t exist. Some of us have hallucinations from time to time, and they stem from three causes generally: brain problems, drugs, or visual problems. They are not features of a healthy brain, and they can occur in just about any form you can imagine. Here we are literally chasing ghosts—apparitions that don’t exist.  Our brains have been proven quite imperfect thus far, and perhaps the best demonstration of this is how our memories work: poorly. Our realities are only a collection of our memories, so this is troubling. This starts from the process of creating a memory from scratch and how many steps can go wrong in that process of encoding, storing, and retrieving. But it doesn’t end there. Visit our sponsor Let's Get Checked at https://TryLGC.com/NMG and get 20% off your order! Brain Blunders: Uncover Everyday Illusions and Fallacies, Defeat Your Flawed Thinking Habits, And Think Smarter (Or Just Less Stupidly) By Peter Hollins Get the audiobook on Audible at https://bit.ly/brain-blunders Show notes and/or episode transcripts are available at https://bit.ly/self-growth-home Peter Hollins is a bestselling author, human psychology researcher, and a dedicated student of the human condition. Visit https://www.PeteHollins.com to pick up your FREE human nature cheat sheet: 7 surprising psychology studies that will change the way you think. For narration information visit Russell Newton at https://bit.ly/VoW-home For production information visit Newton Media Group LLC at https://bit.ly/newtonmg #memory #encoding #psychologist #AliceinWonderland #CharlesBonnet #Hallucinations #HarvardUniversity #LSD #McMasterUniversity #OliverMason #PCP #Parkinson #TOT #UniversityCollegeLondon #WilliamJames