Authors: Arthur Koestler
Valenti proceeded to explain, in a slightly bored voice, that the implanting of electrodes into human brains was of
course only done for therapeutic purposes; the new scientific insights gained by applying the method were a welcome bonus, nothing more. Thousands of patients all over the world were going about their business with twenty to forty electrodes permanently anchored in their brains. They were implanted under local anaesthesia and could remain in place for years, without causing any discomfort. The brain is insensitive to touch, it can be cut, frozen, cauterized, without the patient being aware of it; it is so well protected inside the skull that it needs no sensory- or pain-receptors. Neurosurgeons have for a long time been in the habit of operating on conscious patients who keep chattering with the doctor and feel no pain while the affected parts of their brain are excised. But the earlier methods of lobotomy, leucotomy or electro-shock therapy were sheer butchery compared with the use of the delicate electrode needles. They were connected to sockets cemented to the patient's skull, which could be hidden by a bandage, or a wig, or some elaborate coiffure. The disorders thus treated included epilepsy, intractable pain, insomnia, severe anxiety and depression, uncontrollable violence and some forms of schizophrenia. Some cases were treated in outpatients' departments where they received electric brain stimulation at regular intervals; others carried in their pockets portable stimulators which enabled them to activate the electrodes when they felt an attack of pain, or of violent rage coming on. Needles implanted in the so-called pleasure centres of the hypothalamus gave patients a feeling of euphoria or of erotic arousal which sometimes ended in the psychic equivalent of an orgasm.
âDoes that also serve a therapeutic purpose?' grunted Blood.
âIt may, in certain cases,' Valenti said cautiously, realizing that he had gone too far in alluding to certain rather esoteric lines of research.
âWhat's wrong with good old mas-tur-bation?' Blood wanted to know. âYou don't need platinum needles for that.'
Valenti's smile became even more polite, but he ignored
Blood. âThere have also, been successful experiments in which we use the electrodes to establish two-way radio communication between the subject's brain and a computer. The computer is programmed to recognize disturbances in the electrical activity of the brain which signal the approach of an epileptic attack or a fit of violent rage; when the computer is thus alerted, it activates by radio the needles in the inhibitory centres which block the attack ⦠And now, I think, I have given you the necessary information, and we can proceed with the demonstration.' He signalled to Gustav: âCall Miss Carey, please.'
Most of the participants had paid no attention to the fact â or had not even noticed it â that Miss Carey was absent from the session, and the tape-recorder was operated by Claire.
âMiss Carey,' Valenti explained while they were waiting for her to appear, âwas sent to me as a patient with severe anxiety alternating with violent episodes in which she attacked members of her family, particularly her younger, married sister â¦'
There was an uneasy silence while they waited, as in a dentist's waiting-room with its collective awareness of the unpleasant experience ahead. At last the glass swing-door was flung open with a flourish by Gustav, who held it courteously for Miss Carey to pass. She was smiling, and fingering the grey bun on top of her head. All glances were momentarily on that bun, then hurriedly lowered to dossiers and writing pads.
âGood morning, Miss Carey,' Valenti smiled. âWill you please sit over there?'
He indicated a chair which stood isolated in a corner of the room, placed there at his request before the beginning of the session. Miss Carey sat down primly, apparently enjoying the occasion. Half the participants had to turn their chairs round.
âNow, Miss Carey,' Valenti addressed her, adjusting his wrist-watch which was of an unusually large size, âyou don't mind taking part in this little demonstration?'
â
Love it
,' Miss Carey replied. âAnything you say, doctor.'
âBefore you came to the clinic, you were not too well?'
âI was terrible,' said Miss Carey.
âWhat was troubling you?'
âAll sorts of foolish things.'
âWon't you tell us about it?'
âI was a silly girl,' Miss Carey giggled.
âWhat were you afraid of?'
âI don't like to remember. Just silly things.'
âBut you must tell us. You are all right now, and you know that by co-operating in these demonstrations you are helping other patients to recover.'
Miss Carey nodded, still giggling. âI know, doctor, but I just don't like to remember.'
âShall I help you to remember?' He again adjusted some dial on his complicated wrist-watch. âNow, Eleanor. Tell us what it felt like to be frightened.'
A ghastly change took place in Miss Carey. Her face went ashen, her breath became laboured as if she had an attack of asthma, her spindly fingers gripped the arm-rests of the chair as if sitting in an aeroplane that was going to crash.
âDon't do that,' she panted. âPlease stop it.'
âWhat are you frightened of?'
âI don't know. I feel that something dreadful is going to happen.' She was twisting and turning in her chair, exploring the corner of the room behind her back. âI feel that a man is standing behind me.'
âThere is only the wall.'
âI know but I feel it. Please stop it, stop. For the love of Christ.'
âYou were also frightened of being sent to hell for your sins. But you know there is no hell.'
âHow do you know? I have seen those pictures.' A tremor ran through her body and did not stop.
âWhat pictures?'
âStop itâ¦' Suddenly she screamed. Blood got up noisily and shambled out of the room. Miss Carey screamed a second time and seemed on the verge of hysterics. Valenti
adjusted his dials. Her body suddenly relaxed, she took several deep breaths and her colour returned.
âThere you are, Eleanor,' Valenti said. âAll is well again.'
She nodded. Both were smiling.
âDo you mind having gone through the experiment?'
âNot in the least, doctor, I was just being silly again.'
âDo you have any hostile feelings towards me?'
Miss Carey shook her head vigorously. She was becoming increasingly animated. âI would like to kiss your hands, doctor,' she giggled. âYou are my saviour.'
She watched him adjusting a dial. âAh,' she sighed. âThis feels lovely. It must be the naughty needle. Naughty, naughty. You are doing itâ¦'
Her expression became ecstatic. Suddenly Harriet shouted:
âRot. Stop it. This is an obscenity.'
Solovief rapped the table. âI think you have made your point, Dr Valenti.'
But already Miss Carey had returned to normal. Doctor and patient were again smiling at each other. âSome of these gentlemen â and ladies â seemed to be upset,' Valenti said to her. âDo you understand why they were upset, Miss Carey?'
She shook her head, her wrinkled face resuming its look of the benevolent, ageing nun. âNo, doctor. I just noticed Sir Evelyn leaving the room.'
Valenti bowed to her politely. âThank you very much, Miss Carey. Well, ladies and gentlemen, this is the end of the demonstration. As you may have noticed, our electronic wizards have succeeded in reducing the radio-stimulator to the size of a wrist-watch.' He put the gadget down on the table. âIf anybody is interested, I shall be glad to explain the mechanism. And now, to bring my chatter to an end, we may perhaps draw certain conclusions from these studies, which apply not only to individual patients, but to mankind as a wholeâ¦'
But after the demonstration with Miss Carey, Valenti's diagnosis of the human condition met with a certain resistance, if not hostility. He pointed out that Miss Carey had
evidently been conscious of her experiences under electrical stimulation, and remembered them afterwards, but was not in the least upset by the memory. She remembered her
thoughts,
but this did not receive the
emotions
which had accompanied them. Similarly, those ideas â like eternal damnation â which had frightened the wits out of her at the time of her illness, now that she was cured, appeared to her merely as âall sorts of foolish notions'. But even now, after her cure, those attacks of ghastly fear could still be evoked by stimulation of the deep, archaic structures of the brain in which they originated. Similarly, feelings of elation or love and devotion could be elicited from other areas of that ancient and primitive part of the brain which man had in common with his animal ancestors â the seat of instincts, passions and biological drives, These antediluvian structures at the very core of the brain had hardly been touched by the nimble fingers of evolution. In contrast to this anachronistic core, the modern structures of the human brain â the rind or neocortex â had expanded during the last half a million years at a truly explosive speed which was without precedent in the whole history of evolution; so much so that some older anatomists compared it to a tumorous growth. But explosions tend to upset the balance of nature, and the brain-explosion in the middle of the Pleistocene gave birth to a mentally unbalanced species. If anybody were to doubt this statement, he only had to look at human history through the eyes of a dispassionate zoologist from another planet. The disastrous historical record pointed to a biological malfunction; more precisely, it indicated that those recently evolved structures of the brain, which endowed man with language and logic, had never become properly integrated with, and coordinated with, the ancient, emotion-bound structures on which they were superimposed during their explosive proliferation. Owing to this evolutionary blunder, old brain and new brain, emotion and reason, when not in acute conflict, lead an agonized co-existence. On one side, the pale cast of rational thought, of logic suspended on a thin thread all too easily broken; on the other, the native fury of passionately
held irrational beliefs â which, as Dr Epsom had pointed out, were responsible for the holocausts of past and present history. The neocortex had been compared to a computer; but when a computer was fed biased data, the outcome was bound to be disastrousâ¦
âMy good man,' interrupted Blood â who had shambled back to his seat after the demonstration, âthere is nothing new in this. I can quote you a hundred sonorous passages written by the best professional diagnosticians â the poets â who assure us that man is mad, and always has been.'
âBut if you will forgive me,' Valenti smiled, âpoets are not taken seriously, and never have been. Today, however, we possess the evidence, from anatomy, psychology and brain research, that our species, as a whole, is afflicted by a paranoid streak, not in the metaphysical but in the clinical sense; and that this condition, by an evolutionary mistake, is built into our brains. My eminent colleague, Dr Paul MacLean, has coined the term
schizophysiology
for this condition; he defines it, if I may quote him, as a “dichotomy in the functions of the philogenetically old and new cortex that might account for differences between emotional and intellectual behaviour. While our intellectual functions are carried out in the newest and most highly developed part in the brain, our emotive behaviour continues to be dominated by a relatively crude and primitive system, by archaic structures in the brain whose fundamental pattern has undergone hardly any change in the whole course of evolution from rat to man⦔
âAnd this brings me to the conclusion of my chatter. Evolution has made many mistakes; the fossil record shows that to each surviving species there are hundreds that perished. Turtles are beautiful animals, but they are so top-heavy that if by misadventure they fall on their backs, they cannot get up again. Many elegant insects are victims of the same engineering mistake. If evolution is under divine guidance, then the dear Lord must be very fond of experimenting. If it is a natural process, then it must proceed by trial and error. But man, although mad, has engaged in a dialogue with God;
he has acquired the power to transcend biological frontiers and correct the shortcomings and errors in his native equipment. The first step, however, is a correct diagnosis. This, I believe, dear friends, modern brain research can provide. If our diagnosis is correct, the therapy will follow. We already have the power to cure individual patients â who are the extreme examples of the collective disorder which afflicts our species. Soon we shall have the power to attack it at its roots, and produce an artificial mutation by neuro-engineering. As I have said before, a desperate situation needs desperate remedies. And to quote another of my eminent colleagues, Professor Moyne: “It appears that the scientists in brain research stand on a threshold similar to the one on which atomic physicists stood in the early 1940s.” This is the end of my chatter.'
Like the other call-girls, Valenti had started haltingly, with well-worn clichés and oratorial tricks, but had gradually warmed to his subject and ended on a note of sincerity, even passion. But was not that passion, too, inspired by the archaic structures deep down in the spongy tissues of his brain; and were the data presented to the computer perhaps also biased by them?
The discussion after Valenti's paper was chaotic, as usual, but ended in an unusually dramatic fashion. Von Halder spoke first, repeating what he had said before: aggression was endemic in
homo homicidus;
individual therapy â however clever the methods of Valenti and his colleagues â was not enough; the urgent need was for MAT â Mass-Abreaction Therapy â organized on an international scale.
Harriet wanted to know whether Valenti's needles were able to block out not only aggression but also misguided devotion â to immunize against morbid infatuation with a Circe or a Duce.