Book description
At the age of forty-six, philosopher and university professor
Helmut Dubiel was diagnosed with Parkinson's Disease. In the early
stages of his sickness, fearing censure and ostracism, Dubiel did his
utmost to conceal his condition. But when his symptoms became too
obvious to camouflage, he was obliged to admit defeat and decided to
undergo deep brain stimulation surgery. Following this operation,
Dubiel found himself in possession of a peculiar power: with little
more than the flick of a switch he was able to choose between a
personality defined as irascible and maudlin and the lucid,
quick-thinking academic he had always been. In this fascinating book,
Dubiel describes the course of his illness with a philosopher's
aplomb, ennobling his personal experience with intellectual flair and
scientific insight as he makes connections between his own medical
drama and some of today's most significant global tendencies. Above
all, Deep In the Brain describes a battle: the battle between the
inclination to give up, to view oneself as dead to the world, and the
force necessary to reinvent oneself and rise above one's illness.
Devoid of self-pity, Dubiel vanquishes his illness by using it as a
source of philosophical reflection on the twofold nature of modern
medicine, the meaning of success and acceptance, and the true nature
of that capricious creature we call I.”