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Possessing Genius: The Bizarre Odyssey of Einstein's Brain

par Carolyn Abraham

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For nearly half a century the pickled brain of Albert Einstein has roamed the world-in Tupperware containers, courier packages, and, most famously, car trunks. In Possessing Genius, award-winning journalist Carolyn Abraham presents the whole story-the mysteries, myths, and almost unbelievable facts-of the brain's postmortem odyssey.The story begins with in April 1955, when Thomas Stolz Harvey, chief pathologist at Princeton Hospital, found himself in charge of dissecting the cadaver of the greatest scientist of his age, perhaps of any age. He seized the opportunity to do something "noble." Using an electric saw Harvey sliced through the skull and gingerly removed the organ that would both define and haunt the rest of his life. Harvey struck a controversial deal with Einstein's family to keep the brain, swearing to safeguard it from souvenir hunters and publicity seekers, and to make it available only for serious scientific inquiry. Not a neuroscientist himself, he became the unlikely custodian of this object of intense curiosity and speculation, and the self-styled bulwark against the relentless power of Einstein's growing celebrity.Bridging the post-war era and the new millennium, Possessing Genius is the first comprehensive account of the circuitous path the brain took with Harvey during the decades it remained in his possession. Harvey permitted Einstein's gray matter to be sliced, diced, probed, prodded, and weighed by those hoping to solve the enigma, and locate the source, of genius itself. Einstein's brain was more than a subject of scientific investigation but a kind of holy relic; the history of its perambulations since 1955 reflects the vicissitudes and vanities underpinning what we believe makes us human. Abraham has gathered together all fascinating details and documents of the brain's saga-including previously unpublished correspondence between Harvey and Otto Nathan, the executor of Einstein's estate-and from them woven a story that is both deeply engrossing and highly illuminating.… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 4 mentions

3 sur 3
7/9/22
  laplantelibrary | Jul 9, 2022 |
What a great story. And one that proves, yet again, that truth can be stranger than fiction.

When Albert Einstein died in 1955, pathologist Thomas Harvey conducted an autopsy. He removed Mr. Einstein's brain and, with the reluctant, post-facto consent of the family, because its custodian. He promised that the brain would only be used for scientific study. However, not being a neurologist himself, he sent sections of the brain to other scientists over the years. Lot of years....nearly half a century. This book looks at Dr. Harvey's life -- he was married three times, moved a lot, and kept most of Mr. Einstein's brain in Tupperware containers, It also looks at how brain research evolved, making it possible to study Mr. Einstein's brain in new ways as technology developed, and reports on the findings. In addition, it looks at Mr. Einstein's brain as a cultural phenomenon. Very interesting, highly readable. ( )
  LynnB | Feb 16, 2022 |
Is this really a true story ? Well yes, it is.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albert_Einstein's_brain
A facinating read ( )
  carterchristian1 | Jun 29, 2010 |
3 sur 3
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The cult of individuals is always, in my view, unjustified. To be sure, nature distributes her gifts unevenly among her children. But there are plenty of the well endowed, thank God, and I am firmly convinced that most of them live quiet, unobtrusive lives. It strikes me as unfair and even in bad taste to select a few for boundless admiration, attributing super-human powers of mind and character to them. This has been my fate, and the contrast between the popular estimate of my powers and achievements compared to the reality is simply grotesque. The awareness of this strange state of affairs would be unbearable but for one pleasing consolation: It is a welcome symptom in an age which is commonly denounced as materialistic that it makes heroes of men whose goals lie wholly in the intellectual and moral sphere. This proves that knowledge and justice are ranked above wealth and power by a large section of the human race. -- Albert Einstein, July 1921, after visiting the United States of America for the first time
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For my parents, Dudley and Thelma Abraham, who nurtured brain and heart, and for Stephen Rouse, who takes such good care of both.
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For nearly half a century the pickled brain of Albert Einstein has roamed the world-in Tupperware containers, courier packages, and, most famously, car trunks. In Possessing Genius, award-winning journalist Carolyn Abraham presents the whole story-the mysteries, myths, and almost unbelievable facts-of the brain's postmortem odyssey.The story begins with in April 1955, when Thomas Stolz Harvey, chief pathologist at Princeton Hospital, found himself in charge of dissecting the cadaver of the greatest scientist of his age, perhaps of any age. He seized the opportunity to do something "noble." Using an electric saw Harvey sliced through the skull and gingerly removed the organ that would both define and haunt the rest of his life. Harvey struck a controversial deal with Einstein's family to keep the brain, swearing to safeguard it from souvenir hunters and publicity seekers, and to make it available only for serious scientific inquiry. Not a neuroscientist himself, he became the unlikely custodian of this object of intense curiosity and speculation, and the self-styled bulwark against the relentless power of Einstein's growing celebrity.Bridging the post-war era and the new millennium, Possessing Genius is the first comprehensive account of the circuitous path the brain took with Harvey during the decades it remained in his possession. Harvey permitted Einstein's gray matter to be sliced, diced, probed, prodded, and weighed by those hoping to solve the enigma, and locate the source, of genius itself. Einstein's brain was more than a subject of scientific investigation but a kind of holy relic; the history of its perambulations since 1955 reflects the vicissitudes and vanities underpinning what we believe makes us human. Abraham has gathered together all fascinating details and documents of the brain's saga-including previously unpublished correspondence between Harvey and Otto Nathan, the executor of Einstein's estate-and from them woven a story that is both deeply engrossing and highly illuminating.

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