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

Author:

Fins Joseph J.123ORCID,Vernaglia John S.4

Affiliation:

1. Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, NY, USA

2. The Consortium for the Advanced Study of Brain Injury, Weill Cornell Medical College and The Rockefeller University, New York, NY, USA

3. Solomon Center Distinguished Scholar in Medicine, Bioethics and the Law, Yale Law School, New Haven, CT, USA

4. The College of Social Studies, Wesleyan University, Middletown, CT, USA

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.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Neurology (clinical),General Neuroscience

Reference96 articles.

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2. Baumgartel W. 2005. Walter Freeman’s lobotomies: oral histories. National Public Radio. November 16, 2005 [cited 2021 Dec 25]. https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=5014594

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