Walter Freeman: The Doctor With the Icepick
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This episode explores Walter Freeman, the neurologist who popularized the transorbital “icepick” lobotomy in America and helped transform psychosurgery into a widely accepted psychiatric procedure during the mid twentieth century.
Rather than focusing on gore or sensationalism, the discussion examines the psychological, institutional, and philosophical dimensions surrounding medical certainty, psychiatric overcrowding, emotional flattening, authority, and the ethics of altering human personality through surgery.
The episode also explores how confidence, desperation, and optimism combined to normalize one of the most disturbing chapters in medical history.
Topics covered: Walter Freeman and transorbital lobotomy Psychiatric hospitals and institutional medicine The psychology of authority and certainty Assembly-line medicine Personality alteration and emotional flattening Ethics and neuroscience The collapse of the lobotomy movement
Walter Freeman, lobotomy, psychology, psychiatry, neuroscience, institutional medicine, medical history, midnight drive podcast
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