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The Ancient Egyptians pulled the mentality out through the nose in the process of slough of the body.
A lobotomy is a scrutiny machine that was done on patients (while alive) to assuage symptoms of mental illness. It became well known as a means to 'cure' psychological illness in 1945 when a sugeon/psychologist named Freeman preformed lobotomies on patients with behavioural/psychological issues. He would append a metal handgun (like an ice pick) behind the receptor and essentially scrambled the adornment lobe of the mentality (the part that controls your language, social abilities, whatever behaviour). It often failed, or made matters worse. It's not utilised anymore unless in extremity conditions in which there is no other choice.
So, the ancient egyptians removed the entire brain, and not meet dilapidated the adornment lobes, and not for scrutiny purposes. I think your co-worker confused the definition of lobotomy.
Granted, ancient cultures same the Greeks utilised methods of surgery to remove 'demons' often intellection to be unfree within a persons skull. In that case it's titled 'trepanning', in which a hole is drilled into the skull to release the 'demon'. Sometimes this worked (especially if the person's scrutiny condition involved mentality swelling), sometimes it didn't. It was often done with spiritual significance.
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