Why Modern Life Feels Overwhelming
Written by neuroscientist and practising neurologist Dr. Paul Goldsmith, The Evolving Brain combines clinical insight, evolutionary science, and compelling storytelling to explain stress, distraction, status, anxiety, technology, and human behaviour in a rapidly changing world.
Neuroscientist & practising
neurologist
Visiting Professor at Imperial
College London
Translated into 11 languages
Selected as a New Scientist
Best New Popular Science Book of 2026
Why do modern humans struggle with stress?
Distraction, Burnout, Social Comparison, and Constant Uncertainty
According to The Evolving Brain, many of these challenges are not personal failings, but the result of a profound mismatch between ancient neural systems and the environments we now inhabit.
Drawing from neuroscience, evolutionary biology, medicine, psychology, and real clinical cases, Dr. Paul Goldsmith explores how the brain evolved for survival in small, social groups — not for digital overload, endless information, modern work structures, or constant stimulation.
The book explains:
Why status and social approval feel neurologically powerful
Why anxiety and stress are deeply evolutionary
Why modern technology exploits ancient reward systems
Why humans are wired for persistence more than happiness
How understanding the brain can help individuals and organisations thrive
Through accessible storytelling and scientific insight, The Evolving Brain offers a new framework for understanding human behaviour in the modern age.
Ten Principles for Modern Life
Drawn from the book, these ten principles distil key insights from neuroscience and evolutionary medicine into practical guidance for modern living.
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Don’t Confuse Blame with Responsibility. Your brain evolved for a different world. The struggles that follow aren’t your fault — but you’re the one best placed to improve things.
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Remember You Were Shaped for Persistence, Not Happiness. Your brain is ultimately a movement-driven goal pursuit system.
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Choose Activities Over Passivities. You are an animal, not a brain in a jar. Act, move, make.
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Keep Your Goals Achievable. If melancholy is signalling effort outweighs reward, adjust the goal, not your self-worth.
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Validate and Be Validated. Belonging is a survival need, undermined by modern systems. Seek relationships where effort is visible and reciprocity is real. Count shoulders to cry on, not followers.
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Beware Status Traps. Status seeking is a biological instinct, often powerful but sometimes destructive. “Better” and “worse” reflect different histories, not different worth.
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Shape Your Environment. Willpower is weak; contagion is powerful. You become what you see and who you are with. Choose carefully.
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Calibrate, Don’t Avoid. Anxiety is a modifiable smoke alarm. Avoidance only makes it louder.
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Don’t Harbour Negative Thoughts. Your frontal lobes and modern environments trap fleeting emotions in festering loops. Resentment and revenge were built for moments, not long-term storage. Stop ruminating.
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Hold the Self Lightly. There is no single ‘driver’ inside your brain. Or theirs. Thoughts and behaviours emerge like weather systems — brewed by biology and history. Do not get entangled; do not blame the storm.
Why Now?
Throughout my work as a neurologist and neuroscientist, I became increasingly interested in a recurring question:
Why do so many intelligent, capable people struggle in environments that modern society tells us should help us thrive?
In clinical medicine, neuroscience, public health, and organisational life, I repeatedly encountered the same underlying pattern — human brains shaped by millions of years of evolution attempting to navigate systems and technologies that emerged only recently.
This book brings together insights from neuroscience, evolutionary medicine, psychology, and clinical experience to explore how ancient neural systems continue to shape modern behaviour, emotion, stress, decision-making, and social life.
My hope is that understanding the evolutionary origins of the brain can help individuals, organisations, and societies create healthier, more human-centred ways of living and working.
REVIEWS Praise for The Evolving Brain
"We blame ourselves for burnout, envy and endless distraction. But this book shows it is wiring, not weakness: an ancient brain flailing in a modern world. The Evolving Brain explains why stress, distraction and anxiety are evolutionary. It takes in the neuroscience lab and evolutionary human backstory to explain why we're wired not for happiness but for persistence. Why status feels addictive, why copying drives culture — and why the secret to thriving is to understand, not override, the brain we have. This is about why we crave approval, why we mirror others, why we stumble when rewards come too slowly. The Evolving Brain offers a bracing (if sometimes disturbing) new clarity on the allure and snares for humans in the digital world."
MD, author of Dopamine Nation
"By linking evolutionary neuroscience to modern work and life, The Evolving Brain explains not only why our brains struggle today, but how we can redesign leadership, technology, and organizations to help people thrive. One of the most insightful books of our times."
Bestselling author of With the End in Mind and Listen
"A wide-sweeping, panoramic perspective on how our brains are confronted by — and can adapt to — the formidable challenges of the modern world."
Neuroscientist and author of Tiny Experiments
"A great read; a fascinating analysis of the incompatibility between the modern world and our brains, supported by amazing examples from clinical experience, reminiscent of Oliver Sacks' The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat."
"Paul Goldsmith gave a very insightful session on the modern human dilemma: living in a world our brains were never designed for. From burnout and overwhelm to social comparison and digital overload, this was a deeply relatable session. His perspective? These struggles aren't personal failings — they're ancient survival mechanisms trying to navigate a very modern world. It was one of those sessions that truly stays with you."
2026
"The Evolving Brain is a fascinating exploration of how our ancient brains are mismatched for our modern ecosystem, and what we can do about it. With case studies, rich science, and compelling prose, Goldsmith reminds us we are the strangest of animals."
Professor of Evolutionary Psychology and author of Friends and The Social Brain
Goldsmith reveals with striking clarity how the brain's ancient wiring — shaped for survival tens of millennia ago — continues to sculpt our thoughts and feelings today. The Evolving Brain bridges evolution, anatomy and modern life with rare insight.
President, Ogilvy Consulting and author of Alchemy
"Paul writes beautifully, and his combination of storytelling and scientific exploration shines a light on the complexity of the human brain and our resulting behaviours in an exciting and accessible way. This is a book to help us to understand ourselves."
Professor of Psychology, Norwegian University of Science and Technology
"The Evolving Brain explores how many of our struggles are not personal shortcomings but the legacy of an ancient brain in a modern world. By tracing the roots of these challenges and offering ways to adapt, Goldsmith provides a fresh and compassionate perspective on what it means to thrive today."
Health Commentator
"Excellent book by a highly accomplished neurologist, who explains how the brain works in terms that everyone can understand."
"An excellent book, beautifully written. A very enjoyable read."
Professor of Anatomy at the University of Cambridge
"We design objects to fit our evolved bodies, yet seldom shape our lives around our evolved minds. This sensational book goes a long way to correcting that painful omission."
"Clear, thoughtful, and accessible. The clinical cases bring the science to life, making The Evolving Brain an essential read for anyone interested in not just understanding themselves, but in building a healthier society."
Author of Don't Be Yourself and Professor of Business Psychology at Columbia & UCL
"A rather impressive and beautifully written multidisciplinary tour de force of knowledge of science and culture. The author draws on his many-faceted background and clinical practice to provide clinical vignettes and a broad reading of science."
Royal Society Trivedi Science Book Prize-winning author of Our Brains, Our Selves
"Wow. Just wow. I have never seen anything thread everything together like this. You need to get this out there now, immediately!"
Consultant Neurologist
"Dit boek biedt veel inzichten en tips waar je op kunt letten om de uitdagingen van het moderne, dagelijkse leven het hoofd te bieden. Ons brein is evolutionair ontwikkeld voor een totaal andere wereld dan de wereld waarin wij leven."
Dutch Edition
About the AuthorAbout Dr. Paul Goldsmith
Dr. Paul Goldsmith is a neuroscientist and practising neurologist whose work bridges neuroscience, evolutionary medicine, healthcare innovation, and public policy.
He holds a triple first in Natural Sciences from the University of Cambridge and received a clinical scholarship from the University of Oxford.
Dr. Goldsmith completed postgraduate medical training in Oxford, at the National Hospital for Neurology in London, and in Cambridge before undertaking a PhD in developmental neuroscience at Cambridge, leading to a longstanding interest in evolutionary medicine.
He is currently a Visiting Professor at Imperial College London within the Institute of Global Health Innovation.
His work explores how evolutionary neuroscience can help explain modern behavioural, psychological, medical, and societal challenges.
Triple First — University of Cambridge (Received triple first-class honours from the University of Cambridge)
Clinical Scholarship — University of Oxford
PhD in Developmental Neuroscience
Visiting Professor — Imperial College London
Neurologist & Neuroscientist
Media & ConversationsPodcasts, Interviews & Conversations
Dr. Goldsmith has appeared across podcasts, interviews, and public conversations discussing neuroscience, evolutionary medicine, stress, technology, behaviour, and modern life.
Research & Writing
Selected Writing & Research
Selected academic papers, policy writing, and publications exploring neuroscience, evolutionary medicine, healthcare innovation, and public policy.
FAQs
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The book explores how ancient neural systems interact with the demands of modern society, technology, work, and culture.
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No. The book is designed for a broad readership and combines accessible storytelling with scientific insight.
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The book touches on stress, anxiety, burnout, behaviour, and psychological wellbeing through the lens of neuroscience and evolution.
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Yes. Media, speaking, and podcast inquiries are welcomed through the contact section.
Get in TouchContact & Media Inquiries
For podcast invitations, speaking engagements, interviews, media inquiries, or professional collaborations, please get in touch.