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  • Einstein’s Brain Was Stolen — What Scientists Found Changed Everything
    2026/05/07

    Einstein’s brain was stolen after his death — and then spent decades hidden in jars, beer coolers, cardboard boxes, and car trunks across America.

    In this episode of Blossoming Brains, Dr. Vicki Draeger explores the astonishing true story of Albert Einstein’s brain, the pathologist who secretly took it, and the neuroscience discoveries that followed. Along the way, the episode examines genius, neuroplasticity, mathematical thinking, curiosity, and the surprising science behind how brains change through learning and experience.

    Was Einstein simply born different, or did a lifetime of imagination and relentless curiosity physically shape his brain over time?

    This episode explores:

    • The theft of Einstein’s brain after his death in 1955
    • The bizarre life of pathologist Thomas Harvey
    • What researchers actually found inside Einstein’s brain
    • Why glial cells may matter more than we once believed
    • How neuroplasticity reshapes the brain throughout life
    • Why curiosity may be one of the most powerful learning tools we possess

    Listen now and explore the remarkable science behind genius and lifelong learning.

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    34 分
  • That Remarkably Bright Creature: Intelligence, Consciousness, and a Truly Alien Mind
    2026/05/05

    How smart is an octopus, really? In this episode of Blossoming Brains, Dr. Vicki Draeger explores octopus intelligence, the distributed octopus brain, camouflage, tool use, dreaming, and what this remarkable animal can teach us about consciousness and learning.

    From the famous escape of Inky the octopus to the science of cephalopod cognition, this episode uncovers how octopuses solve problems, sense the world, and challenge what we think a mind can be. Listen now and discover why one of the ocean’s strangest creatures may also be one of its brightest.

    You’ll learn how an octopus’s 500 million neurons are spread between a central brain and eight semi‑independent arms, creating a distributed nervous system that blurs the line between “body” and “mind.” We dive into how octopus skin, packed with chromatophores and light‑sensing cells, acts like a thinking display—enabling instant camouflage, communication, and possibly a form of embodied thought. We also look at octopus tool use, personalities, problem‑solving, and the heartbreakingly short lifespan of these intelligent cephalopods.

    In this episode, you’ll hear about:

    • Inky the escape artist – how a real‑life octopus escape reveals problem‑solving and behavioral flexibility.
    • A brain in each arm – why most neurons live in the arms and what this decentralized design suggests about alternative intelligences.
    • Thinking skin and camouflage – how chromatophores and texture‑changing skin let octopuses disappear into reefs, rocks, and sand in milliseconds.
    • Octopus dreams and sleep – new research on REM‑like sleep and what color‑shifting at rest may reveal about animal consciousness.
    • Convergent evolution of big brains – how a soft‑bodied mollusk evolved advanced cognition and why that matters for theories of intelligence.
    • Personalities, play, and tool use – bold vs. shy octopuses, coconut‑shell shelters, locked‑jar experiments, and cause‑and‑effect learning.
    • Reproduction and short lives – the tragic biology of octopus mating, the optic gland, and why such a complex brain is paired with a brief lifespan.
    • From octopus to soft robotics – how engineers use octopus arms and camouflage as blueprints for soft robots and surgical tools.
    • What the octopus reveals about minds – how distributed, embodied cognition expands our definition of what a mind can be.

    Blossoming Brains is a neuroscience‑inspired, story‑driven podcast for curious adults, homeschool families, educators, and lifelong learners who want to understand how brains—human and animal—learn, adapt, and grow. Hosted by Dr. Vicki Draeger, an award‑winning educator, author, and mother of five, each episode connects brain science, evolutionary biology, psychology, and everyday learning in accessible, engaging ways.

    🔍 Explore references and resources for this episode: visit vickidraeger.com for links and further reading on octopus brains, cephalopod intelligence, convergent evolution, and consciousness.

    🌱 Stay connected: share your favorite insight from this episode, tag us with your octopus questions or homeschool science ideas, and don’t forget to keep learning, keep growing, and keep blossoming.

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    37 分