
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


When physician Walter Freeman died in 1972, he still believed that lobotomies were the best treatment for mental illness. A pioneer in the method, he was a deeply confident and charismatic man who eagerly spread the technique in America, long after the rise of alternative treatments that were less destructive. Listen as journalist Megan McArdle and EconTalk's Russ Roberts discuss what McArdle calls the "Oedipus Trap": mistakes that no one can live with, even if they were innocently made, and how admitting such mistakes to ourselves is nearly impossible. They also discuss the complexity of the credo, "follow the science."
By Russ Roberts4.7
42164,216 ratings
When physician Walter Freeman died in 1972, he still believed that lobotomies were the best treatment for mental illness. A pioneer in the method, he was a deeply confident and charismatic man who eagerly spread the technique in America, long after the rise of alternative treatments that were less destructive. Listen as journalist Megan McArdle and EconTalk's Russ Roberts discuss what McArdle calls the "Oedipus Trap": mistakes that no one can live with, even if they were innocently made, and how admitting such mistakes to ourselves is nearly impossible. They also discuss the complexity of the credo, "follow the science."

2,453 Listeners

2,271 Listeners

1,826 Listeners

1,516 Listeners

79 Listeners

990 Listeners

487 Listeners

22 Listeners

6,616 Listeners

548 Listeners

131 Listeners

2,026 Listeners

31 Listeners

738 Listeners

3,364 Listeners

714 Listeners

816 Listeners

8,455 Listeners

446 Listeners

146 Listeners

1,109 Listeners