The temptation to change where you decide this person is beyond the pale of consideration that we would give a quote normal human being. I don't know if Walter Freeman drifted over the course of his life in terms of recommending the procedure for people that maybe 20 years before he 10 years before he wouldn't have been interested in. He was mad about the Columbia math PhD because she credited psychoanalysis with fixing her problems. It was extremely angry that she didn't credit the lobotomy. There was definitely, there was also the fact that yeah people would end up in a silums because they were difficult. But then there's another question that I think you have to think about which is, and so again
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."