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Mind Beyond Matter- Part 1: Minds Without Brains

Mind Beyond Matter- Part 1: Minds Without Brains

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(00:00:00) Mind Beyond Matter- Part 1: Minds Without Brains (00:03:34) Mind Without Brains (00:04:30) Slime Mold (00:07:23) Mimosa Pudica (00:09:17) Mushrooms (00:11:57) Outro 🎙️ Part 1: Mind Without Brains ✨ Series: Mind Beyond MatterEver met a genius blob?In this mind-bending premiere of Mind Beyond Matter, we meet creatures that think without a brain. From slime molds that can design subway systems, to plants that remember, learn, and even make decisions. We journey through strange forms of intelligence hiding in plain sight: shy plants that stop flinching, fungi that "talk" underground, and organisms that challenge what it means to know.Are brains really the only seat of thought? Or is intelligence something more… distributed? Rhythmic? Hidden in places we never thought to look?From squishy slimes to sentient stems, this episode is a love letter to all the quiet, weird, and wonderful minds of nature.🧠 Featuring:Physarum polycephalum (the Tokyo-dreaming slime mold)Mimosa pudica (our very own makahiya)Pea plants with Pavlovian instinctsForest fungi and the Wood Wide Web👁️‍🗨️ Prepare to unlearn what you know about intelligence. 🌱 Because maybe… the world is thinking back.Thank you for listening and for keeping wonder alive.Stay curious. Keep your wonder close. 🌙✨A gentle note:This episode of the LilWeird Podcast blends science, folklore, thought experiments, and a pinch of poetic speculation. While everything shared is rooted in credible research and genuine curiosity, this isn’t a scientific journal. It’s a storytelling space. So take what resonates, question what doesn’t, and let your mind wander freely. Interpret with care, and most of all, wonder responsibly.📚 References & Suggested ReadingsNakagaki, T., Yamada, H., & Tóth, Á. (2000). Maze-solving by an amoeboid organism. Nature, 407(6803), 470.→ This paper explores how a slime mold (Physarum polycephalum) solved a maze using its natural foraging behavior—a mindless organism solving spatial problems that mimic human-designed systems.Reid, C. R., Latty, T., Dussutour, A., & Beekman, M. (2012). Slime mould uses an externalized spatial “memory” to navigate in complex environments. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 109(43), 17490–17494.→ Shows how slime molds leave behind chemical trails to avoid retracing their steps, effectively demonstrating memory without neurons.Gagliano, M., Renton, M., Depczynski, M., & Mancuso, S. (2014). Experience teaches plants to learn faster and forget slower in environments where it matters. Oecologia, 175(1), 63–72.→ A groundbreaking study revealing that plants like Mimosa pudica are capable of learning and memory through habituation.Adamatzky, A. (2022). Language of fungi derived from their electrical spiking activity. Royal Society Open Science, 9(4), 211926.→ This research suggests that electrical activity in fungi might encode information in a language-like form.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/lilweird-podcast--6099720/support.Here’s how you can support and explore more:🌕 Become a Ko-fi supporter and receive the Moon Notes Journal - a dreamy little guide to help you reflect, set intentions, and write under the phases of the moon🌌 Follow the LilWeird Podcast on your favorite app✨ Leave a rating or review! It helps more curious minds find us🌿 Join as a supporter on Ko-fi to unlock future perks and behind-the-scenes magic🧭 Explore all LilWeird links here →Linktree: https://linktr.ee/lilweirduniverseInstagram: @lilweird_universeSubstack: https://lilweirduniverse.substack.com/Ko-fi: https://ko-fi.com/lilweirduniverse
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