An Evolutionary History of the Human Brain, in 7 Minutes | Lisa Feldman Barrett

The Well · 2026-05-22 ·▶ Watch on YouTube ·via captions

Lisa Feldman Barrett dismantles the popular "triune brain" model, tracing its flawed origins from Plato through Carl Sagan, and replaces it with a more accurate account: brains evolved not in layers but through a shared vertebrate plan, shaped by the pressures of predation and metabolic efficiency. ---

Key Concepts

ConceptDefinition
Triune BrainDiscredited model proposing the brain evolved in three stacked layers — reptilian (instincts), limbic (emotions), cortical (rationality)
Common Brain PlanThe scientifically supported view that all mammals (and possibly all vertebrates) share a single developmental blueprint; differences arise from how long each developmental stage runs, not from added layers
Metabolic BudgetBrains consume ~20% of the body's energy despite being only ~3 lbs — making metabolic efficiency a primary evolutionary selection pressure
TeleologyThe philosophical problem of explaining *why* something evolved; such explanations are unfalsifiable stories — scientists can better address *how* organs evolved and what functions they serve
Arms Race HypothesisLeading scientific hypothesis that brains emerged when predation began, triggering an evolutionary race for better sensory systems, motor coordination, and neural integration

Notes

The Triune Brain — A Flawed but Persistent Model

  • Brain is ~3 lbs and consumes ~20% of metabolic budget — unusually expensive, raising the question of what it evolved *for*
  • The triune brain model proposed three evolutionary layers:
  • Problem: reptiles and mammals both evolved *from fish*, on separate branches — there is no "inner lizard" in mammals
  • The only animal with a lizard brain is a lizard

Origins of the Layered Brain Myth

  • Roots trace to **Plato**: the psyche as two horses (instincts, emotions) controlled by a charioteer (reason) — a morality tale, not science
  • This metaphor persisted for millennia and was absorbed into early neuroscience
  • Entrenched in popular culture by **Carl Sagan's *The Dragons of Eden* (1977)** — a Pulitzer Prize–winning bestseller that popularized the triune brain narrative

How Molecular Genetics Overturned the Model

  • From the 1970s onward, molecular genetic techniques allowed tracing of the genes that form brain cells
  • Findings: the brain did **not** evolve in sedimentary layers
  • All mammals share a **common brain plan**; size differences (e.g., mouse cortex vs. human cortex) reflect differences in the *duration* of developmental stages, not added evolutionary layers

The Real Story: How Brains Evolved

  • **Amphioxus** (amphioxes): worm-like creatures, ~500 million years old, with no brain, no eyes, no ears — essentially "little stomachs on a stick"
  • Survived for millions of years without sensing much about their environment
  • Scientists' best current hypothesis: brains emerged when **one animal deliberately hunted another**
  • Predation created predators and prey, launching an evolutionary arms race
  • Drove development of: sensory systems (distance sensing), motor systems (coordination), internal organs (larger bodies)
  • More parts to coordinate → need for a brain

What Brains Are Actually For

  • Brains function as a **coordination and control center** for bodily systems
  • Core function: coordinate parts in a **metabolically efficient** way to survive and reproduce
  • Metabolic efficiency is a **major selection pressure** — inefficient coordination wastes energy needed for reproduction
  • The *why* of brain evolution is teleological and unverifiable; the *how* and the *function* are what science can address

Actionable Takeaways

  1. Stop using the triune brain / lizard brain framing — it has been scientifically refuted since the 1970s and misleads thinking about emotion, rationality, and behavior
  2. When evaluating evolutionary "why" explanations, treat them as useful narratives, not verified facts — ask instead about *mechanism* and *function*
  3. Frame the brain primarily as a **metabolic efficiency organ**, not a reasoning organ — this reframes what "optimal" brain function means

Quotes Worth Keeping

The only animal on this planet that has a lizard brain is a lizard.
The why question is a really tough question — it's what philosophers refer to as teleology. Anything that any scientist or philosopher or historian tells you about why something evolved is just a story. We can never really verify the truth value of that story.
Metabolic efficiency is a major, major selection pressure. If your parts aren't working efficiently in a coordinated way, you don't have enough energy to do really what is your ultimate job — which is to produce offspring.