Gerald Hurowitz

Associate Director, The Helix Center
Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychiatry, Columbia University Medical Center

Gerald Hurowitz is Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychiatry and on faculty for the past 30 years at Columbia University College of Physicians & Surgeons. He has a full-time clinical practice in psychopharmacology and neuropsychiatry in New York City. Dr. Hurowitz is a founder and Chief Medical Officer at M3 Information, an information technology company that focuses on mental health integration into primary care. He has co-authored the chapter Psychopharmacology and Electro-convulsive Therapy in the American Psychiatric Press’s Textbook in Psychiatry (2nd ed.) and is the author of several articles in the fields of psychopharmacology and neuropsychiatry. He has presented in a wide range of venues, including at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association, at Columbia’s Comprehensive Review of Current Neuro-psychiatry, at the New York State Psychiatric Institute’s Arden House Conference, and at Open Minds. He has co-directed since 1992 the course in Clinical Neuropsychiatry for Columbia’s 4th year Psychiatry residents and ran a weekly clinical psychopharmacology conference on Columbia’s inpatient teaching unit for much of the 1990s and 2000s. Dr. Hurowitz received a Master’s Degree in Philosophy from NYU, an MD from Jefferson Medical College, and a Bachelor of Arts (Physics & Philosophy) from Yale University in 1979. He attended the NYU/Bellevue residency in psychiatry in New York City, where he served as Chief Resident in 1987-8.

Participant In:

The Animal Human Continuum

Saturday, December 15th, 2018

Past Event

Ancient Egyptians placed animal and bird heads on divinities’ bodies, in an embracing worldview wherein both gods and beasts extend and transcend the human ken. In his scientific extension of this ancient mythology, Darwin’s 1872 The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals explored non-human sentience. The affective neuroscientist of our era, Jaak Panksepp,… read more »

Boredom

2:30pm to 4:30pm, Saturday, April 21st, 2018

Past Event

Schopenhauer described boredom as “a tame longing without any particular object,” Dostoevsky as “ a bestial and indefinable affliction,” and poet Joseph Brodsky as “time’s invasion of your world system.” Unsurprisingly, not many can describe boredom even though most have felt it, and it is one of the central preoccupations of the age. The most… read more »

How Deep Do We Go? Behavior, Mind, and The 4-Billion-Year History of Life

Saturday, February 29, 2020 at 2:30pm

Past Event

The starting point of this roundtable discussion is Joseph LeDoux’s book, The Deep History of Ourselves: The Four-Billion-Year Story of How We Got Conscious Brains. LeDoux’s research on how the brain detects and responds to danger helped jumpstart and define the modern science of emotion. After three decades, he came to the realization that the commonly… read more »