Where Is Einstein's Brain Being Kept?

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Albert Einstein's brain is indeed preserved and was kept in a small-town doctor's office near Kansas City, specifically by Dr. Thomas S. Harvey, who conducted Einstein's autopsy in 1955. Initially stored in a cardboard box, the brain was later sliced into sections and placed in bottles. The reasons for its preservation are debated; while some suggest Einstein intended it for research, others claim the decision was made by his son. Despite initial interest, research on the brain stalled due to family objections and disagreements among researchers. However, neuroanatomists Marian Diamond and Arnold Scheibel from UC-Berkeley later examined samples and discovered that a part of Einstein's brain had a higher number of glial cells compared to average brains, suggesting a link between intellectual stimulation and brain development. The discussion humorously concludes with a fictional twist involving Jeffrey Dahmer, but this is not based on factual events.
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Is it true Albert Einstein's brain is kept in a bottle in a small-town doctor's office near Kansas City? --Listener, Mike Murphy show, KCMO radio, Kansas City, Missouri

Cecil replies:

You heard right, friend. What's more, for a long time the doctor kept the brain in a cardboard box behind a beer cooler. You'd think the mind that unlocked the atom would rate something a little fancier--a place up there with the bowling trophies, at least--but that's not how things worked out. For 30-some years Big Al's noodle has been in the somewhat casual custody of Thomas S. Harvey, MD, of Weston, Missouri. Harvey was the pathologist at Princeton Hospital in New Jersey who performed the autopsy when Einstein died in 1955.

Why the brain was preserved at all is not clear; the rest of the body was cremated shortly after death. One biographer says Einstein wanted it to be used for research; the executor of his estate denies this, and says the decision to preserve it was made by his son. At any rate, plans to examine the brain never really got off the ground. One of Harvey's associates blabbed prematurely to the press and the ensuing publicity antagonized the family. Then Harvey and other researchers couldn't agree on the best way to proceed with the dissection. The brain eventually did get sliced up (it's kept in several bottles today), but after that things just sort of fizzled out. Despite repeated promises, neither Harvey nor any of the other original investigators has published anything about the brain to date.

The whole episode might have been a complete waste of time except for the efforts of two neuroanatomists at UC-Berkeley, Marian Diamond and Arnold Scheibel. Several years ago they learned of the brain's existence and persuaded Harvey to send them some samples. Diamond had done earlier research in which she found that rats who were raised in an intellectually stimulating environment (for a rat) had larger than average brains, and she was curious to see if something similar occurred in humans. Sure enough, she and Scheibel found that one portion of Einstein's brain contained significantly more "glial" cells than a sampling of ordinary brains. (Glial cells perform various support functions for the neurons, which do the brain's thinking.) Ergo, it's possible that if you use your head more, your brain becomes more developed. That may not sound like a real breakthrough, but it beats what anybody else has come up with.

--CECIL ADAMS
 
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RAD4921 said:
Is it true Albert Einstein's brain is kept in a bottle in a small-town doctor's office near Kansas City? --Listener, Mike Murphy show, KCMO radio, Kansas City, Missouri
Not any longer, I'm afraid.
Jeffrey Dahmer ate it. And the doctor.
 
arildno said:
Not any longer, I'm afraid.
Jeffrey Dahmer ate it. And the doctor.
:smile: hehe
 
They were saving it for a future president, unfortunately there was a terrible mix up at the hospital...

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