
What if cancer isn’t just a disease… but a split personality inside your own body?In this episode of Mayim Bialik's Breakdown, Dr. Michael Levin (Professor of Biology at Tufts University, Director of the Allen Discovery Center) drops paradigm-shattering insights that could redefine medicine, consciousness, intelligence...and what it even means to be human.He explains why he calls cancer “dissociative identity disorder of the body” — a breakdown in the body’s bioelectrical network — and how this could open the door to treating cancer without drugs or chemotherapy, why “mind blindness” prevents us from recognizing nonhuman intelligence, and how “human” might be defined in a future of tech implants and biological augmentation.Dr. Levin also breaks down:- What does a body think about before there is a brain?- Can we regrow limbs in our lifetime?- Are we closer than we think to communicating with our organs via an app?- What flatworms reveal about how trauma and memory are imprinted in tissue, and whether we might one day overwrite trauma itself- What nonhuman intelligence could actually look like- How you might play tic-tac-toe with an alien- Real dangers of anthropomorphizing AIDr. Levin also tackles some of humanity’s biggest existential questions:- Are we defining consciousness all wrong?- How can ancient traditions and modern biophysics coexist?- Why compassion may be the most advanced technology we haveFrom developmental biophysics to computer science to cognitive science, this conversation explores how intelligence may be woven into life itself — from cells to organs to entire bodies.If what he’s saying is right…Medicine will change.AI debates will change.And our understanding of ourselves will change.You will never look at your body the same way again!


