eScholarship Repository eScholarship Repository California Digital Library
eScholarship > CHHS > Paper Dolan_neurologicalhumanism2006

CHHS Papers

CHHS Website

Policies

Search CHHS

Submit a Paper

Notify me of new papers

institute_logo

Center for Humanities and Health Sciences at UCSF

CHHS Papers  •  CHHS Website  •  Policies  •  Search  •  Submit a Paper

Neurological Humanism: The Divided Brain and the Unification of Two Cultures
Brian Dolan, UCSF

This paper was originally presented at the American Association of Neurological Surgeons Annual Meeting, San Francisco, April 24, 2006.

Download the Paper (127 K, PDF file) - April 24, 2006 Tell a colleague about it.
Printing Tips: Select 'print as image' in the Acrobat print dialog if you have trouble printing.

ABSTRACT:
This paper concerns debates that flourished in the 1960s and 1970s about the effect of technological and scientific development on the “dehumanization” of medicine. It draws on perspectives from neuroscience and neurosurgery to reexamine philosophical positions about the relations between the brain and the mind, the seat of the soul, the divide between the arts and sciences in Western culture, and scientific investigation of “human nature.” Framing the discussion with debates in the 1960s about the gap between science and humanism, it explores the ideas of Caltech psychobiologist Roger Sperry to illuminate a reaction against the molecularization of life and challenges to the intellectual nature of medical inquiry. It draws connections between neurological concepts of the divided brain and the idea that the fields of neurology and neurosurgery might unify what C.P. Snow characterized as the “two cultures” by redefining humanity and creating what Sperry called a “science of human values.”

SUGGESTED CITATION:
Brian Dolan, "Neurological Humanism: The Divided Brain and the Unification of Two Cultures" (April 24, 2006). Center for Humanities and Health Sciences at UCSF. Paper Dolan_neurologicalhumanism2006.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/dahsm/chhs/Dolan_neurologicalhumanism2006

 
bar
Open Archives Initiative eScholarship is a service of the California Digital Library bepress