If this 2016 book has been discussed previously on tips, my apologies.  I
don't recall such and found it to be of upmost interest and importance to
those of us who teach psychology.  The author, Luke Dittrich, is the
grandson of one of the major practitioners of the lobotomy, Dr. Scoville.
In the process of writing this book he discovers that the surgery
performed on Molaison was a lobotomy performed by his grandfather.  As he
notes, this is in contrast to the common impression circulated for many
decades that the operation on HM was a botched surgery performed by
well-meaning surgeons who were attempting simply to relieve HM of his
seizures.

Dittrich claims that his grandfather likely knew the risks but felt he had
everything to gain and little to lose.  As stated in a review in the
NYT's, "Dittrich’s righteous indictment of his own grandfather is
undeniably powerful. . . (and) by the middle of the 20th century,” Mr.
Dittrich writes, “the breaking of human brains was intentional,
premeditated, clinical.”  This almost total lack of accountability within
the psychiatric community is baffling and infuriating.  But I feel that a
similar state exists to this day regarding psychiatrists' diagnostic
process and their extensive reliance on medications as a form of
biological treatment which have been questioned by many. Who's watching
the store?

The author also has some general criticism of how Henry was used as a
scientific subject and how his general state of mind was misrepresented as
being care-free and fairly content. Dittrich provides a quote of HM in
response to a questionnaire about his state of mind: "I feel that the
future is hopeless and that things cannot improve” and “I feel that I am a
complete failure as a person.”  Those quotes eerily resemble those made by
two other men living with anterograde amnesia: Clive Wearing talking about
his life on you tube and "Jimmy's" reflections in the book by Oliver
Sacks,
The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat. Whatever, for your interest, I
highly recommend the following review as well as an NPR interview.

NYT's review of Patient H.M.:
https://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/04/books/review/patient-h-m-luke-dittrich.html

https://www.npr.org/2016/08/14/489997276/how-patient-h-m-and-his-lobotomy-contributed-to-understanding-memories


Also of interest to some though certainly controversial:
http://ahrp.org/patient-h-m-dark-roots-and-dubious-ethics-of-neuroscience-research-methods/


Joan
Joan Warmbold Boggs
Professor of Psychology
Oakton Community College









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