I'll bet you can not find any mentions of colorblindness oe dyslexia either
Exactly -- I actually thought about that later in the evening. There are many things I can think of that are not mentioned in past times, at the very least because some things weren't even considered remarkable. Amazing that this even got published.
No Attention Deficit Dissorder...
And here's one example. :)
He consistently said that it was therapists that were planting ideas in people's heads.
I don't doubt that repressed memory is real. However I also know that 'false' memories can be instilled by suggestion to susceptible people.
The problem here is "all or nothing" syndrome. Are there instances where this has occurred? Yes, very likely, from what I've read. There are a large number of very poorly trained therapists, out there, who think nothing of mucking around with hypnosis and EMDR on people, while having a poor understanding of mind and neurology. Apparently, though, their poor work has been taken as "the norm", when there is plenty of
real scientific literature that supports both the existence of this phenomenon, and appropriate methods of working with it -- ones that do
not influence one's perceptions, but allow the patient to come to the memories on their own.
Luckily I know that I have repressed things because some I have been told so by others and I still don't remember them
I have not recovered any specific, concrete memories (I don't think!), but I know that there are things
missing in my memory. For example, when I was 3, I apparently pulled a cup of boiling water down on my chest, which scalded me severely. I don't remember the incident at all, but I've been told about it, and have the shadow of some scarring on my chest to prove it. As unscientific as my little anecdote is, it is magnitudes more provable than anything said in this article.
I don't understand the concept of "you're allowed to forget what color underwear you were wearing last Tuesday but you aren't allowed to *forget* anything more significant". What crap.
Good point. :)
Harvard isn't the end all and be all of...well, anything. They've got idiots, too.
Yes, there's competent and incompetent in every field and profession, and, more generally, those who are more curious vs. those who are more rigid. Mostly, though, it's the arrogance and hubris of making such a claim on such a childish premise, from someone who is the head of a psych center affiliated with a major university that has a well-renowned medical program, that's surprising and disconcerting. As Eleanor said, "What do they teach people in schools nowadays?" ;)