The Man Knows His Brains

Funnily enough it was hearing Mark Solms talk some years ago that led me to acquire his “Hidden Spring” on the strength of it, with no prior knowledge, even though it was some time before I actually had the bandwidth to read him. Like Iain McGilchrist, his work is now an embedded part of my own research. I’m a fan.

After an exchange on X/Twitter yesterday and today drawing attention to Mark’s work to others debating the limitations of public-knowledge or objective-science when it comes to explanations of consciousness – both its causal power and our subjective experience of it – someone shared a recent BrainLand PodCast conversation with him.

It’s advertised as being “On the neuroscience of sleep and dreaming” (the focus of Mark’s earlier work) but is much wider ranging. As with understanding consciousness itself, so much knowledge of “normal” behaviour and experience is derived from understanding abnormalities and anomalies – the so-called “Lesion Literature” etc. So too with sleep and dreaming. Their differences in relation to waking and non-dreaming experiences, and anomalies in these, are key to understanding their normal reality.

What I and Ken Barrett (the Podcast presenter) both remarked on is the infectious enthusiasm with which Mark naturally covers the range of topics. And he does it from his own immediate experience in research and in relation to the work of others before and since and the reactions of science-politics around these contentious fields then and now. His knowledge is clearly authentic. The honesty of failed hypotheses and unexpected results as part of the process, no need to take credit for the “accidents” along the way. And, as in any other field, it’s much harder to talk if you have to remember hidden or dubious agendas in your story. If you’re dealing with truth, talking under questioning, changing topics as necessary, is free and easy.

Mark Solms knows his and our, brains and minds.
More people should be paying attention to him and his work.
What do you think?

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Post Note: Coincidentally also today, I discover Karl Friston – a source in and a collaborator with Solms work – has been added to the participant list at the 2026 HTLGI Conference / Festival at Hay-on-Wye 22-25 May 2026.

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