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Cornell Has A Brain Collection. Here's What You Should Know

Author

Ethan Hayes

Updated on March 18, 2026

Today, the human brains — most of which are, startlingly, unidentified — have no real scientific use, according to what Cornell professor Barbara L. Finlay told The New York Times. But they do have a philosophical one. "The students who come in here and pass by the display cabinet," Finlay said, "are forced to confront the brain. This is the thing. This is where you happen. I want them to confront the question, 'Is there something else or not?'"

Wilder was convinced that the brains explained everything — that you could tell the difference between a brilliant scholar and a notorious criminal just by looking at the differences in their gray matter. He was mostly wrong. Today neuroscientists believe sociopaths may have lower activity in their orbital cortex (via NPR), but that's shown through scans of live brains, not preserved dead ones.

If you visit Cornell's Ithaca Campus, you can see the brain collection for yourself. The brains of Wilder, Gardener, and Rulloff are all on display alongside five others: Edward Titchener, the psychologist who coined the word "empathy"; Henry A. Ward, a naturalist; Jeremiah Jenks, an economist; Sutherland Simpson, a physiologist; and Simon Henry Gage, an anatomy professor (via Ithacating).