
@article{ref1,
title="Bioethics and the breakdown of the bicameral mind: Sacks and Luria revisited",
journal="Journal of medical humanities",
year="1989",
author="Schiedermayer, David L.",
volume="10",
number="1",
pages="26-44",
abstract="Since antiquity, individuals have attempted to relate mental processes to circumscribed areas of the brain. In 1935 the neurologist Wilder Penfield purported to know, &quot;the humming of the mind's machinery, and where words come from,&quot; after he electrically stimulated areas of the exposed human cortex. Recent theories have suggested a functional separation of the dominant and the nondominant hemispheres, the right brain/left brain concept of thought and personality. One author has even proposed that human consciousness and modern civilization developed when the bicameral mind broke down, and the left brain achieved mastery over the right nondominant temporal lobe. Compared to these mechanistic approaches to brain function and human personality, the Russian neurologist, A.R. Luria and his American follower, Oliver Sacks, have developed a more intellectually satisfying and clinically useful approach which relies on a fuller understanding of the doctor-patient....<p /><p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1041-3545",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}