Firstpost
  • Home
  • Video Shows
    Vantage Firstpost America Firstpost Africa First Sports
  • World
    US News
  • Explainers
  • News
    India Opinion Cricket Tech Entertainment Sports Health Photostories
  • Asia Cup 2025
Apple Incorporated Modi ji Justin Trudeau Trending

Sections

  • Home
  • Live TV
  • Videos
  • Shows
  • World
  • India
  • Explainers
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Cricket
  • Health
  • Tech/Auto
  • Entertainment
  • Web Stories
  • Business
  • Impact Shorts

Shows

  • Vantage
  • Firstpost America
  • Firstpost Africa
  • First Sports
  • Fast and Factual
  • Between The Lines
  • Flashback
  • Live TV

Events

  • Raisina Dialogue
  • Independence Day
  • Champions Trophy
  • Delhi Elections 2025
  • Budget 2025
  • US Elections 2024
  • Firstpost Defence Summit
Trending:
  • Nepal protests
  • Nepal Protests Live
  • Vice-presidential elections
  • iPhone 17
  • IND vs PAK cricket
  • Israel-Hamas war
fp-logo
Albert Einstein's brain on display in London exhibition
Whatsapp Facebook Twitter
Whatsapp Facebook Twitter
Apple Incorporated Modi ji Justin Trudeau Trending

Sections

  • Home
  • Live TV
  • Videos
  • Shows
  • World
  • India
  • Explainers
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Cricket
  • Health
  • Tech/Auto
  • Entertainment
  • Web Stories
  • Business
  • Impact Shorts

Shows

  • Vantage
  • Firstpost America
  • Firstpost Africa
  • First Sports
  • Fast and Factual
  • Between The Lines
  • Flashback
  • Live TV

Events

  • Raisina Dialogue
  • Independence Day
  • Champions Trophy
  • Delhi Elections 2025
  • Budget 2025
  • US Elections 2024
  • Firstpost Defence Summit
  • Home
  • Tech
  • Albert Einstein's brain on display in London exhibition

Albert Einstein's brain on display in London exhibition

FP Archives • March 28, 2012, 09:05:06 IST
Whatsapp Facebook Twitter

Now a new London exhibition explores the human brain, and showcases brains from various eras. Right from mummified Egyptian ones to slices of Albert Einstein’s brain, it’s quite a display.

Advertisement
Subscribe Join Us
Add as a preferred source on Google
Prefer
Firstpost
On
Google
Albert Einstein's brain on display in London exhibition

London: The human brain has fascinated scientists and general public for a long time. The whole left vs right side of the brain debate is just one aspect of this fascination. Now a  new London exhibition explores the human brain, and showcases brains from various eras. Right from mummified Egyptian brains to slices of Albert Einstein’s brain, it’s quite a display. The show at London’s Wellcome Collection asks not what brains have done for us but what, in the name of science, we have done to brains. “Brains have been prepared and weighed and sliced and generally (messed) about with,” Ken Arnold, the museum’s head of public programs, said Tuesday. “This exhibition is, almost contrarily, about the brain, rather than the mind,” he said. “An exhibition about what the brain is, rather than what the brain does.” The gray mass inside our skulls is our exceptional organ, the one that can’t be transplanted, the seat of intellect and personality. It is part of us, but it’s also the essence of us. Which is why brains fascinate — and why seeing one in a jar delivers a special shudder. [caption id=“attachment_257753” align=“alignleft” width=“380” caption=“A selection of brain specimens preserved in acrylic illustrating different pathologies on loan from the Mutter Museum -The College of Physicians of Philadelphia are seen on display at an exhibition call ‘Brains -The Mind as Matter’ at the Wellcome Collection in London. AP”] ![](https://images.firstpost.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/Brain_Exhibition_AP_28March.jpg "Brain_Exhibition_AP_28March") [/caption] There are plenty of such shocks in “Brains: The Mind as Matter,” a show that puts the brain under a microscope — sometimes literally. The brain has fascinated and baffled scientists for centuries, ever since medieval Christian and Islamic scholars recognised it as the repository of thought and memory. The exhibition, which opens Thursday and runs to 17 June, features mummified, desiccated, galvanized and pickled brains — testament to our sometimes misguided attempts at scientific understanding. Generations of scientists have extracted and measured brains, to see if they could find the secret of genius — or evil — in the organ’s size and texture. The exhibition includes a range of celebrity brains, including those of 19th-century murderer William Burke and women’s suffrage pioneer Helen Gardiner. There’s also the left lobe of mathematician Charles Babbage, and two slides carrying pieces of Einstein’s brain, kept by a pathologist and studied by scientists ever since for clues to his genius. That secret remains elusive. Scientists no longer believe, as they did in the 19th century, that character can be read in the contours of the skull, or that smarter people have bigger brains. (Einstein’s is not particularly large.) The discovery of neurons — the cells that transmit information from the brain to the body — has led to huge advances in understanding how the brain works. Yet the brain remains “a complex and inscrutable substance,” said the show’s curator, Marius Kwint. And despite huge medical advances, brain surgery remains a brutal business, in some ways little changed since our ancestors bored holes in skulls with flint tools thousands of years ago. One such neatly drilled Bronze Age skull is on display in the London show. “It’s basically down to drilling and cutting and sawing,” said Kwint. The exhibition drives that point home, viscerally, with an assortment of skull saws, drills and other items from the brain surgeon’s toolbox, as well as a graphic 1930s instructional film on how to perform a craniotomy. The Wellcome Collection is a cross between medical museum and art gallery, and the exhibits on display range from the clinical to the artistic. The medical specimens are interspersed with artworks that deal with the brain, including Annie Cattrell’s silvered bronze casts of the inside of a skull and Katharine Dowson’s delicate, feathery images based on cerebral angiograms. There are constant reminders that brains have long been collectible, for interests of science or curiosity. Kwint said the show is, in part, an exploration “of the ethics and politics and even the economy of the giving and taking of brains.” From 19th-century scientists taking the brains of criminals to the Nazis experimenting on those they considered their racial inferiors, brains have often been taken without their owners’ consent. Today’s scientists are once again on a quest to archive brains — this time with the permission of their donors — in the hope of unlocking the secrets of degenerative neurological conditions like Alzheimer’s. The exhibition ends on a hopeful note, with testimonies from people who have agreed to leave their brains to science. One, Albert Webb, says in a recording that he made the decision so “I won’t be burnt to death when I get into a coffin.” “And I should be doing a bit of good, perhaps, to somebody.” AP

Tags
BuzzPatrol Exhibition Human brain Albert Einstein's brain
End of Article
Written by FP Archives

see more

Latest News
Find us on YouTube
Subscribe
End of Article

Impact Shorts

Microsoft signs $20 bn AI cloud power deal with Nebius, the firm that spun out from Russian internet giant

Microsoft signs $20 bn AI cloud power deal with Nebius, the firm that spun out from Russian internet giant

Microsoft signed a $17.4 billion deal with Nebius for AI cloud computing until 2031, potentially reaching $19.4 billion. Nebius will supply capacity from a new New Jersey data center. Despite increased spending, Microsoft faces AI capacity shortages due to high demand for AI applications.

More Impact Shorts

Top Stories

Israel targets top Hamas leaders in Doha; Qatar, Iran condemn strike as violation of sovereignty

Israel targets top Hamas leaders in Doha; Qatar, Iran condemn strike as violation of sovereignty

Nepal: Oli to continue until new PM is sworn in, nation on edge as all branches of govt torched

Nepal: Oli to continue until new PM is sworn in, nation on edge as all branches of govt torched

Who is CP Radhakrishnan, India's next vice-president?

Who is CP Radhakrishnan, India's next vice-president?

Israel informed US ahead of strikes on Hamas leaders in Doha, says White House

Israel informed US ahead of strikes on Hamas leaders in Doha, says White House

Israel targets top Hamas leaders in Doha; Qatar, Iran condemn strike as violation of sovereignty

Israel targets top Hamas leaders in Doha; Qatar, Iran condemn strike as violation of sovereignty

Nepal: Oli to continue until new PM is sworn in, nation on edge as all branches of govt torched

Nepal: Oli to continue until new PM is sworn in, nation on edge as all branches of govt torched

Who is CP Radhakrishnan, India's next vice-president?

Who is CP Radhakrishnan, India's next vice-president?

Israel informed US ahead of strikes on Hamas leaders in Doha, says White House

Israel informed US ahead of strikes on Hamas leaders in Doha, says White House

Top Shows

Vantage Firstpost America Firstpost Africa First Sports
Latest News About Firstpost
Most Searched Categories
  • Web Stories
  • World
  • India
  • Explainers
  • Opinion
  • Sports
  • Cricket
  • Tech/Auto
  • Entertainment
  • IPL 2025
NETWORK18 SITES
  • News18
  • Money Control
  • CNBC TV18
  • Forbes India
  • Advertise with us
  • Sitemap
Firstpost Logo

is on YouTube

Subscribe Now

Copyright @ 2024. Firstpost - All Rights Reserved

About Us Contact Us Privacy Policy Cookie Policy Terms Of Use
Home Video Shorts Live TV