
Think Out Loud Michael Pollan meditates on consciousness
Mar 6, 2026
Michael Pollan, best-selling author exploring food, culture, and consciousness, joins to unpack what it feels like to be a mind. He talks about inner experience sampling, plant sensing and sentience, neural correlates versus panpsychism, why current AI likely lacks true consciousness, and how meditation and tech fasts shape presence. Short, curious, and wide-ranging.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Beeper Sampling Revealed Prosaic Inner Moments
- Michael Pollan participated in Russell Hurlburt's beeper experiment to sample inner experience by recording thoughts at random beeps and debriefing via long interviews.
- His beeps were prosaic (mostly about food), and Hurlburt concluded Pollan had little inner experience, a finding Pollan disputed.
Thought Often Isn't Verbal
- Hurlburt's sampling suggests many people don't primarily think in words; about a third think in words, a third in images, and others in unsymbolized thought.
- Unsymbolized thought is a reported mode that's neither visual nor verbal and challenges assumptions about 'thinking in words.'
Plants Have Rich Sensoriums
- Plants possess many senses beyond human five senses, including pH detection, molecular attractants, sound perception, spatial awareness, and learning abilities.
- Examples include plants producing chemicals when fed-on, vines mimicking leaf shapes, bean plants targeting poles, and plants learning for 28 days.








