“Where Is the Mind?” with Andrew Holecek and Sam Harris is a conversation (featured on Harris’s podcast and related platforms) that explores a deceptively simple question: is the mind located anywhere at all?
Here’s the core of what they’re getting at:
🧠 The short answer
They argue that the mind is not a single place in the brain—it’s better understood as a process or field of experience rather than a physical object you can point to.
🧩 Key ideas from the conversation
1. The mind isn’t a “thing” inside your head
A common intuition is that “you” are somewhere behind your eyes. Both speakers challenge this.
- Neuroscience shows no single “control center” where the mind resides
- Instead, mental activity is distributed across many brain processes
- Even more radically: your experience doesn’t feel located when examined closely
This aligns with Sam Harris’s broader view that the self is largely an illusion constructed by the brain
2. The “self” is constructed, not fundamental
Through meditation (a big theme for both):
- Thoughts, sensations, and emotions just appear
- There’s no clear “owner” of them
- The sense of a thinker behind thoughts is something the mind creates
This is central to Harris’s work (e.g., Waking Up: A Guide to Spirituality Without Religion), where he argues that noticing this directly changes how you experience life
3. The mind may be more like a
field of awareness
Andrew Holecek brings in Tibetan Buddhist ideas:
- Awareness is open, spacious, and not confined to the skull
- Experience is happening in awareness, not inside a person
- Advanced meditation explores this “non-local” feeling of mind
He often emphasizes going beyond basic mindfulness into deeper practices that reveal how reality is constructed by the mind
4. Brain ≠ mind (but they’re linked)
They don’t deny the brain matters:
- The brain is the physical basis enabling experience
- But the mind is the subjective experience itself
- So asking “where is the mind?” might be like asking “where is a movie?”—it’s not in one pixel, but in the whole dynamic system
🧭 The deeper takeaway
The question “Where is the mind?” turns into something more interesting:
- There may be no fixed center of experience
- The “self” you feel might be a useful illusion
- With training (meditation), you can directly observe this
🧠 A simple way to test it yourself
They often suggest a practical experiment:
- Close your eyes
- Look for the “observer” of your thoughts
- Try to find where “you” are located
Most people discover: you can’t actually find a solid center—only experience itself.
If you want, I can break down the conversation more step-by-step or pull out the most mind-bending moments—they go pretty deep into consciousness and identity.
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