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11, 2001, and other victims of severe, psychologically devastating experiences. "'Some memories can be very disruptive. They come back to you when you don't want to have them -- in removal a daydream or nightmare or flashbacks -- and are usually accompanied by very painful emotions,' said Roger K. Pitman, a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School who is studying the removal approach. 'This could relieve a lot removal of that suffering.'" Eat the pain But, of course, every decent idea has its drawbacks: "'All of us can think of traumatic events in our lives that were horrible at the time but made us who we are. I'm not sure we'd want to wipe those memories out,' said Rebecca S. Dresser, a medical ethicist at Washington University in St. Louis who serves on the President's Council on Bioethics, which condemned the research last year. 'We don't have an omniscient view of what's best for the world.'
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