PERSON
Antonio Damasio
The Portuguese-American neuroscientist who spent four decades demonstrating, with clinical evidence from thousands of brain-damaged patients, that Descartes was wrong—that reason and emotion are not opposing forces but partners, and that a mind without a body cannot make good decisions.
In the winter of 1637, Descartes composed the sentence that would fracture Western thought for four centuries:
Cogito, ergo sum—separating mind from body with the precision of a scalpel. Antonio Damasio spent his career demonstrating, through the clinical evidence of thousands of neurological patients, that this separation was profoundly and consequentially wrong. His foundational case was the patient known as
Elliot: after surgery removed a tumor from his orbitofrontal cortex, Elliot retained his IQ, his memory, his logical reasoning, and his knowledge of what good decisions looked like—and yet could not make good decisions. His life disintegrated. The missing element, Damasio demonstrated, was feeling: without the
somatic markers—the bodily signals that mark certain options as dangerous or promising, that constitute
the felt sense of consequence—Elliot's cognition had no evaluative compass. The
[YOU] on AI cycle takes Damasio as the neuroscientific anchor for one of its most urgent claims: that the most