Charles Fisher Interview by Arnold Richards Part I: From Birth to Adolescence

My interviews with Charles Fisher, M.D. were conducted in 1985 for the Oral History Project of the A.A. Brill Library of the New York Psychoanalytic Society and Institute. The interview is deposited in the Archives and Special Collections of the A.A. Brill Library.

Introduction to Charles Fisher oral history

We are delighted to see this history in print. Many of the stories here are family myths that we remember from our childhoods and that seemed then, as they do now, utterly fantastic. Chuck’s story is the stuff of Victorian novels–suicide mother, depressed and confessional father, bewildering and lonely childhood in an orphan home. During his long and arduous education, mostly at the University of Chicago, he barely supported himself as a stenographer. In his telling of the story, it is always bleak winter in Chicago. The wind off Lake Michigan lashed his fragile body (he weighed 110 pounds) and whipped his tears back towards his ears, as he shivered in his threadbare coat. Due to the Jewish quota system, he was denied entry into medical school and fortuitously found his way into a Ph.D. program in neurobiology, a detour which granted him a Ph.D., gained him entry into medical school, and led him to a major scientific discovery. Where his drive and direction came from remains mysterious. The story of his mother’s bad dream determining his life’s work is a lovely piece of retrospective fantasy but hardly adequate to explain a long and varied scientific career. That career is detailed here in fascinating detail. But for us, the beauty of the history is the glimpse it provides of the lost and lone little boy before he finds himself.

Carla Miner
Barbara Fisher
June, 2007

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Neurobiology: Are we allowing it to lead psychoanalysis astray? By Elio Frattaroli

Neurobiology:  Is it Leading Psychoanalysiis Astray?  (Stumlated by the Charlie Rose show on pychoanalysis with Kandel, Beck, Roose, and Fonagy)

(For info on Elio Frattaroli and Elio Frattaroli’s Book Healing the Soul in the Age of Brain see   www.healingthesoul.net)
 

I believe that psychoanalysis today is suffering from a group Stockholm syndrome in which we have adopted the ideology of the cultural hijackers who are threatening to destroy us.  Who are these cultural hijackers? The proponents of quick-fix medical   model psychiatry, the proponents of quick-fix symptom-oriented short-term CBT, and the proponents of evidence-based practice who believe that the  only valid evidence comes from an MRI or a statistical outcome study.
  Continue reading Neurobiology: Are we allowing it to lead psychoanalysis astray? By Elio Frattaroli

Arnold Richards’s Review of Relational Psychoanalysis, Vol. 2: Innovation and Expansion edited by Aron and Harris

Click to Read: Arnold Richards’s Review of Relational Psychoanalysis: Volume 2. Innovation and Expansion. Relational Psychoanalysis Book Series, Vol. 28. Edited by Lewis Aron and Adrienne Harris. Hillsdale, NJ: The Analytic Press, 2005, 512 pp., $49.95. and published in Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association (2006) 44:413-422. © Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association. It is posted here by permission.

The Brain That Changes Itself

“The Brain That Changes Itself: Stories of Personal Triumph from the Frontiers of Brain Science” is the title of a book by Norman Doidge about the current revolution in neuroscience reviewed in today’s The New York Times by Abigail Zuger, M.D. “The credo of this revolution is neuroplasticity — the discovery that the human brain is as malleable as a lump of wet clay not only in infancy, as scientists have long known, but well into hoary old age.

Take note of third from last paragraph:

For neuroplasticity may prove a curse as well. The brain can think itself into ruts, with electrical habits as difficult to eradicate as if it were, in fact, the immutable machine of yore. Sometimes “roadblocks” can be created to help steer its activity back in the desired direction (like bandaging the stroke patient’s good arm). Sometimes rewiring the circuits requires hard cerebral work instead; Dr. Doidge cites the successful Freudian analysis of one of his patients.

Click here to read the review