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Andreas Killen, "Nervous Systems: Brain Science in the Early Cold War" (Harper, 2023)

Feb 1, 2026
Andreas Killen, historian and professor at CUNY who studies the history of science and psychiatry. He traces 1950s breakthroughs that made the living brain visible. Short tales of patients and methods like EEG, awake neurosurgery, sensory deprivation, and psychopharmacology appear. Cold War fears of conditioning, the rise of brainwashing myths, and links to MKUltra and later interrogations are explored.
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INSIGHT

Finding The Living Brain As A Starting Point

  • Andreas Killen found Gray Walter's 1953 book The Living Brain as the project's entry point and inspiration.
  • That book framed the 1950s as a moment when new techniques let scientists study the living brain directly.
INSIGHT

EEG As The Key Technology

  • EEG became the key technology that transformed brain science by letting researchers record brainwave activity in living subjects.
  • Killen treats EEG as central to the 1950s shift from postmortem brains to studying living brain function.
INSIGHT

Epilepsy Research Drove Memory Discoveries

  • Epilepsy research, especially Wilder Penfield's awake neurosurgery, unexpectedly advanced memory and cortical mapping.
  • Penfield's work linked stimulation of exposed cortex to hallucinations he interpreted as replayed memories.
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