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John Martyn Harlow: 'obscure country physician?'

Version 2 2024-06-16, 13:35
Version 1 2014-10-27, 16:26
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-16, 13:35 authored by M Macmillan
If John Martyn Harlow is known at all in the neurosciences, it is because he was the physician who attended Phineas Gage and followed up his case. Although Harlow's brief but insightful accounts of the changes in Gage's personality are fairly well recognized, and his skill in treating Gage often acknowledged, Harlow himself is, for the most part, the shadowy figure caught by the self-depreciatory characterization of the subtitle of this paper. Although his contribution to the neurosciences was singular, literally and figuratively, he deserves a place in the history of the subject. Harlow's training in antiphlogistic therapy can be seen in his treatment of Gage and in his evaluation of its results. As a medical student, he was also exposed to phrenological doctrine, the influence of which can also be seen in his  appreciation and explanation of some aspects of Gage's behaviour.  Manuscript materials, newspaper reports, and other little known material are used here to evaluate Harlow's contributions to medicine and to the medical, political, and civic life of Cavendish, Woburn, and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

History

Journal

Journal of the history of the neurosciences

Volume

10

Pagination

149-162

Location

London, England

ISSN

0964-704X

eISSN

1744-5213

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2001, Swets & Zeitlinger

Issue

2

Publisher

Smith-Gordon

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