Phineas Gage And The (Literally) Mind-Blowing History Of Brain Science | Random Thursday
Phineas Gage was a railroad worker in 1848 Vermont when a 3-foot iron rod blew through his skull, destroying part of his brain. Not only did he survive, but helped usher in a new era of brain science. Get a T-shirt! http://www.answerswithjoe.com/shirts Support me on Patreon! / answerswithjoe Follow me at all my places! Instagram: / answerswithjoe Snapchat: / answerswithjoe Facebook: / answerswithjoe Twitter: / answerswithjoe

▶︎
10 Amazing Coincidences (And Why They're Not That Amazing Really) | Random Thursday

▶︎
Why Some People Don't Have A "Mind's Eye" | Random Thursday

▶︎
The Surgery That Proved There Is No Free Will

▶︎
The Shocking True Story of Phineas Gage & The Injury that changed Brain Science Forever

▶︎
We're 99.9% sure this pattern is true, but no one can prove it

▶︎
The Strange Science of Why We Dream

▶︎
Jumping Spiders Shouldn’t Be This Smart

▶︎
The Most Mysterious Boy In History | Random Thursday

▶︎
The Simple Rule that BREAKS Mathematics

▶︎
Do You Have Free Will? (Hint: Not Really) | Answers With Joe

▶︎
The hidden logic behind #, @, & and §

▶︎
The Deadliest Weapon of the Ancient World

▶︎
5 Ancient Inventions That Were WAY Ahead Of Their Time | Answers With Joe

▶︎
Why Feet Are Weirder Than You Think

▶︎
Vomiting Up Brain? A Fungus in his Skull? The Gruesome Story of Phineas Gage | Well, I Never

▶︎
The Most Controversial Idea in Biology

▶︎
Why Ancient Humans Went From Black to White?

▶︎
5 Of The Weirdest Theories About Reality | Answers With Joe

▶︎
Is The Universe Just A Giant Brain? Some Scientists Think So.

▶︎
