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  2. Emil Kraepelin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emil_Kraepelin

    Emil Wilhelm Georg Magnus Kraepelin (/ ˈ k r ɛ p əl ɪ n /; German: [ˈeːmiːl 'kʁɛːpəliːn]; 15 February 1856 – 7 October 1926) was a German psychiatrist. H. J. Eysenck's Encyclopedia of Psychology identifies him as the founder of modern scientific psychiatry, psychopharmacology and psychiatric genetics.

  3. Social degeneration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_degeneration

    A major influence on the theory was Emil Kraepelin, lining up degeneration theory with his psychiatry practice. The central idea of this concept was that in "degenerative" illness, there is a steady decline in mental functioning and social adaptation from one generation to the other.

  4. Kraepelinian dichotomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kraepelinian_dichotomy

    Emil Kraepelin (1856–1926). The Kraepelinian dichotomy is the division of the major endogenous psychoses into the disease concepts of dementia praecox, which was reformulated as schizophrenia by Eugen Bleuler by 1908, [1] [2] and manic-depressive psychosis, which has now been reconceived as bipolar disorder. [3]

  5. Descriptive psychiatry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Descriptive_psychiatry

    Descriptive psychiatry is based on the study of observable symptoms and behavioral phenomena rather than underlying psychodynamic processes. In descriptive psychiatry, the clinical psychiatrist focuses on empirically observable behaviors and conditions, such as words spoken or actions taken.

  6. Unitary psychosis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unitary_psychosis

    Karl Ludwig Kahlbaum (1829–1899), a German psychiatrist of seminal importance in the development of the modern nosology and a formative influence on the work of Emil Kraepelin, [32] had taken issue with Neumann's assertion in his 1859 text that mental illness could not be categorised into discrete disease entities. [33]

  7. Dream speech - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dream_speech

    However, there may be another explanation, conforming to Kraepelin's theory, of Jakobson's example if a perfectly fitting associative chain can be found linking indirectly zemřel to seme. Note that seme is a meaningful part of Kraepelin's dream speech specimen 49 in which par-seme-nie [6] is supposed to be Russian for some weeks.

  8. Psychiatry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychiatry

    For Emil Kraepelin, the initial ideas behind biological psychiatry, stating that the different mental disorders are all biological in nature, evolved into a new concept of "nerves", and psychiatry became a rough approximation of neurology and neuropsychiatry. [123]

  9. History of depression - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_depression

    Although melancholia remained the dominant diagnostic term, depression gained increasing currency in medical treatises and was a synonym by the end of the century; German psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin may have been the first to use it as the overarching term, referring to different kinds of melancholia as depressive states. [15]