I think we are very over-invested in medication and medical models of schizophrenia, although as a neuroscientist, I am very well aware of what may be going on in the schizophrenic brain, but I’m equally aware of the power of community, of work, of friendship, and... and of love, combined with... with the right medication and perhaps the right sort of psychotherapy. I think places like Gould Farm, and what’s it called, the North Carolina, Riis?
[Q] CooperRiis.
And, oh, an extraordinary place called CooperRiis, which we visited in North Carolina. I think these represent deep hopes, and should be... and should be very much supported. I don’t think all the money should be poured into the pharmaceutical and physiological research. I think it’s very important to have this communal support as well. I mean, in a completely different way, one sees how miserable and isolated one deaf man is, but if you have a deaf community, it’s totally different. And... the... also in Gould Farm, but also in some of the state hospitals, one must find another identity, a real identity other than being a patient, a schizophrenic. You... you have to be a writer, a – whatever it is – a meteorologist, a carpenter, you need a social role, and one which you’re good at, and one which will be recognised. And I fear this was never the case for my brother Michael – it should have been the case. He was a gifted man, sensitive, loving, he should have had a much better life, and perhaps one day I will write about these things.