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The Man Who Survived a Rod Through His Skull: Phineas Gage Explained

The Man Who Survived a Rod Through His Skull: Phineas Gage Explained

Published 14 hours ago
Description
On March 5, 1823, Phineas Gage was born — a man who would unknowingly become one of the most important figures in the history of neuroscience. In 1848, while working as a railroad foreman in Vermont, Gage survived an unimaginable accident when a 13-pound iron tamping rod blasted through his skull and frontal lobe. He lived — but his personality changed dramatically. Friends claimed he was “no longer Gage,” and doctors began to question everything they thought they knew about the human brain. In this deep-dive episode of The Strange History Podcast, we explore the full historical account of Phineas Gage’s injury, Dr. John Martyn Harlow’s medical documentation, the early debates about brain localization, and how this case helped shape modern neuroscience, psychology, and our understanding of personality. We also examine the lesser-known chapters of Gage’s life — his public exhibitions, his years working as a stagecoach driver in Chile, and the possibility of neurological recovery through brain plasticity. Blending medical history, 19th-century railroad expansion, early brain science, and the philosophical question of identity, this episode reveals how one shocking accident permanently altered the study of the mind. If you’re fascinated by neuroscience, brain injuries, medical mysteries, psychology history, strange true stories, and bizarre historical accidents, this episode belongs in your queue. Follow The Strange History Podcast for more deep dives into the strange, forgotten, and mind-altering corners of history.

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