On December 17, 2018, I encountered a Rebel Wisdom podcast featuring Iain McGilchrist, a renowned psychiatrist who has spent decades studying brain hemisphere differences. In the episode, McGilchrist introduced his theory of the divided brain, which suggests that modern society increasingly views reality through the lens of the left hemisphere, while gradually becoming blind to the right hemisphere’s perspective.
I had heard of left- and right-brain differences before, but McGilchrist’s insights were far more profound. As I delved deeper, I began recognizing my own tendency to over-rely on the left hemisphere—prioritizing productivity, control, and certainty while neglecting intuition, creativity, and deeper meaning. I noticed how I resisted uncertainty, struggled with moments of stillness, and became frustrated when disrupted from tasks.
As I share McGilchrist’s divided brain theory, you may start to recognize similar patterns in yourself. More importantly, you’ll begin to understand how this imbalance may be contributing to today’s widespread meaning crisis.
A short animated video summarizing the left and right brain hemisphere differences via RSA
In his seminal book, The Master and His Emissary, McGilchrist explains that the two hemispheres of the brain perceive reality differently:
While both hemispheres are essential, the right hemisphere provides the more foundational worldview—offering a deeper, more interconnected understanding of life.
We interpret the world through metaphor, a process rooted in the right hemisphere. Before we can analyze or articulate ideas, our intuition must first grasp them. This means that all knowledge begins in the right hemisphere before being processed by the left. However, despite this foundational role, modern society increasingly prioritizes the left hemisphere’s perspective—favoring certainty, measurable outcomes, and rationality over intuition, depth, and ambiguity.
Several factors have contributed to the rise of left-brain dominance in modern culture:
McGilchrist highlights historical evidence for this shift: During the Renaissance, portraits tended to depict people facing left, suggesting a right-hemisphere perspective. Over time, this trend reversed, reflecting an increasing tilt toward the left hemisphere’s worldview.
Similarly, early written languages flowed top-down or right to left—a format favoring right-hemisphere processing. Western languages later adopted a left-to-right structure, reinforcing the left hemisphere’s dominance over language and thought.
At the conclusion of The Master and His Emissary, McGilchrist poses a compelling question: What would happen if the left hemisphere fully suppressed the right?
He envisions a world where:
Sound familiar? In many ways, this is the world we live in today—one obsessed with work, data, and measurable success while struggling with disillusionment, disconnection, and existential emptiness.
A telling example is the modern work culture:
As we spend more time working and less time engaging in meaningful human experiences, we are starving our right hemisphere—weakening our connection to intuition, creativity, and depth.
Moreover, we’ve come to prioritize attention over awareness—living glued to our screens, consuming endless streams of content, and rarely taking moments to simply be present.
Western culture has trained us to favor the left hemisphere’s perspective—placing productivity, logic, and control above intuition, meaning, and connection. But restoring balance is not about rejecting the left hemisphere. Instead, we must acknowledge its proper role—as an emissary serving the right hemisphere’s broader vision.
So, how do we rebalance our brains?
Perhaps, as McGilchrist suggests, awareness itself is the first step toward change. By recognizing the divided brain’s influence on our lives, we may begin to reshape the world around us—not through forceful action, but through a shift in perception.
The dominance of left-brain thinking has led to an era defined by efficiency, control, and productivity—but also one marked by disillusionment and existential crisis. While the left hemisphere serves an essential role, it must not be the master. Instead, a truly balanced mind requires the wisdom, depth, and meaning that only the right hemisphere can provide.
If we can begin to see beyond the narrow lens of left-brain dominance, we may just rediscover what it means to live fully, deeply, and meaningfully once again.
Author: Artem Zen
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