Recent historiography has put to rest debates over whether to address the neurosciences. The question is how? In this article, I stage a dialogue between neurohistory and the history of the emotions. My primary goal is to survey these two clusters and clarify their conceptual commitments. Both center on the role of affect in embodied subjectivity; but their accounts widely diverge. Whereas neurohistorians tend to treat affects as automatic bodily processes, historians of the emotions generally emphasize that affects are meaningful and volitional activities. This divergence entails contrasting understandings of selfhood, embodiment, and historical change. More importantly, I argue, it reflects a broader realm of disputes within the neurosciences. The divisions among methodologies and commitments testify to the importance of historians' selection of evidence as well as the critical perspectives they can bring to scientific debates. The neurosciences do not offer readymade theories. Secondarily, I take stock of the shared limitations of neurohistory and the history of the emotions. Both conceptualize the biological bases of affection as a universal ground for historical inquiry. By reexamining this transhistorical approach to neuroscientific evidence, I suggest that historiography might widen the horizon of interdisciplinary scholarship beyond the present options. (PsycINFO Database Record
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/hop0000047 | DOI Listing |
Handb Clin Neurol
January 2024
Department of Neurology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, United States.
Migraine symptoms were described in ancient Babylonia, and supernatural forces were felt to play a role in etiology and treatment. This changed in the Greco-Roman period, when the (dis)balance of humors was considered in (patho)physiology and treatment based on this. Aretaeus distinguished between cephalalgia, cephalea, and heterocrania.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur Neurol
November 2020
Faculty of Health, Medicine and Life Sciences, Maastricht University, Wijlre, The Netherlands,
Objective: The aim of the work was to study the origin of the idea that herpes labialis (HL) in patients with pneumonia and meningitis was believed to be of prognostic importance.
Background: HL is caused by a primary infection or reactivation of herpes simplex type I. In the past, it has been related to pneumonia and meningitis; moreover, HL was believed to be of prognostic importance.
Handb Clin Neurol
September 2018
Department of Neurology, Zuyderland Medical Centre, Heerlen, The Netherlands. Electronic address:
This chapter is concerned with ideas on the function, structure, and pathology that shaped our present knowledge of the cerebellum. One of the main themes in its early history is its localization subtentorially, leading to misattributions due to clinical observations in trauma and lesion experiments that caused collateral damage to the brainstem. Improvement of techniques led to the insight that it plays a role in movement control (Rolando) or coordination (Flourens).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurology
March 2018
From the Faculty of Medicine (B.L.), University Medical Center Utrecht, the Netherlands; Neuroscience Historian (P.F.), Sydney, Australia; and Department of Neurology (P.J.K.), Zuyderland Medical Center, Heerlen, the Netherlands.
We commemorate the centenary of Constantin von Economo's description of encephalitis lethargica, a mysterious disease that had a significant effect on 20th-century neuroscience. In the acute phase, encephalitis lethargica was marked by intractable somnolence, which von Economo attributed to lesions in the diencephalon, thereby paving the way for future efforts to localize the regulation of sleep in the subcortical brain. At the same time, neuropathologic findings in postencephalitic parkinsonism affirmed the role of the substantia nigra in the pathophysiology of parkinsonism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRecent historiography has put to rest debates over whether to address the neurosciences. The question is how? In this article, I stage a dialogue between neurohistory and the history of the emotions. My primary goal is to survey these two clusters and clarify their conceptual commitments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!