Mike Finn (University of Leeds)
Thursday 30th January
College of Medical and Dental Sciences
College of Medical and Dental Sciences
School of Health and Population Sciences
HISTORY OF MEDICINE AND HEALTH RESEARCH SEMINAR SPRING TERM 2014
The second seminar of the 2014 Spring Term will take
place in room WF38 on the first floor of the Medical School, at 5.30pm
In the 19th century, British asylum doctors were
'philosophical practitioners', balancing metaphysical questions of mental
phenomena with the pragmatic medical issues of diagnosing and treating mental
diseases. They dealt, as a matter of routine, with the problematic relationship
between mind and brain. Indeed, whilst on first inspection
- and in much of the historical literature since -
asylums appear to be unpromising sites for the development of philosophical or
scientific studies, they did in fact provide the location for a wealth of
original research in the Victorian period. In this paper, I will be examining
one particular institution - the West Riding Lunatic Asylum - to show how it
not only became home to one of the most important research schools in the
world, but how it had a lasting impact on our approach to the mind-brain
problem.
ALL ARE WELCOME TO ATTEND
Details of future seminars are available from: Dr Vanessa
Heggie, History of Medicine Unit, College of Medical and Dental Sciences,
University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT.
Email: v.heggie@bham.ac.uk
Tel: 0121 415 8184
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