José Manuel Rodríguez Delgado, Walter Freeman, and Psychosurgery: A Study in Contrasts.

IF 3.5 3区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Neuroscientist Pub Date : 2023-10-01 Epub Date: 2022-04-13 DOI:10.1177/10738584221086603
Joseph J Fins, John S Vernaglia
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Abstract

History has conflated the legacies of José Manuel Rodríguez Delgado and Walter Freeman, midcentury proponents of somatic therapies for neuropsychiatric conditions. Both gained notoriety: Delgado after he appeared on the front page of the New York Times having used his stimoceiver to stop a charging bull in Spain; Freeman as the proponent of lobotomy. Both were the object of critique by the antipsychiatry movement and those who felt that their methods and objectives posed a threat to personal liberty. Using archival sources, we demonstrate that this conflation is a misrepresentation of the historical record and that their methods, objectives, ethics, and philosophical commitments differed widely. Accurate knowledge about historical antecedents is a predicate for ethical analysis and becomes especially relevant information as neuroscience develops circuit-based treatments for conditions such as Parkinson disease, depression, and brain injury. Part of that corrective is to counter the conflation of Delgado's and Freeman's life and work. Appreciating their distinctive legacies can help guide neuropsychiatric research done today that might yet haunt future generations.

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JoséManuel Rodríguez Delgado,Walter Freeman,《心理外科学:对比研究》。
历史将JoséManuel Rodríguez Delgado和Walter Freeman的遗产混为一谈,他们是世纪中期神经精神疾病躯体疗法的支持者。两人都声名狼藉:德尔加多在西班牙用刺激器阻止一头冲锋的公牛出现在《纽约时报》头版后;弗里曼是额叶切除术的支持者。两者都是反精神病运动和那些认为自己的方法和目标对个人自由构成威胁的人批评的对象。利用档案资料,我们证明这种混淆是对历史记录的歪曲,他们的方法、目标、伦理和哲学承诺大相径庭。关于历史前因的准确知识是伦理分析的前提,随着神经科学为帕金森病、抑郁症和脑损伤等疾病开发基于电路的治疗方法,这些信息变得尤为重要。纠正措施的一部分是为了对抗德尔加多和弗里曼的生活和工作混为一谈。欣赏它们独特的遗产有助于指导今天进行的可能困扰子孙后代的神经精神研究。
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来源期刊
Neuroscientist
Neuroscientist 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
11.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
68
期刊介绍: Edited by Stephen G. Waxman, The Neuroscientist (NRO) reviews and evaluates the noteworthy advances and key trends in molecular, cellular, developmental, behavioral systems, and cognitive neuroscience in a unique disease-relevant format. Aimed at basic neuroscientists, neurologists, neurosurgeons, and psychiatrists in research, academic, and clinical settings, The Neuroscientist reviews and updates the most important new and emerging basic and clinical neuroscience research.
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