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8 - The Encephalitis Lethargica Patient as a Window on the Soul

from Part Four - The Patient Constructs the “Neurological Patient”

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2012

L. Stephen Jacyna
Affiliation:
University College London
Stephen T. Casper
Affiliation:
Clarkson University
Paul Foley
Affiliation:
University of New South Wales
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Summary

The adoption of the neurobiological approach to psychiatric disorders was excited in 1845 by the German internist Wilhelm Griesinger (1817-68)—“We must in each case recognize that psychic disorders are disorders of the brain” —and by the Austrian physician Ernst von Feuchtersleben (1806–49)—“Every psychosis is at the same time a neurosis, because without mediation of nervous activity no psychic change is manifested.” This physiological view dominated psychiatric thought until the end of the nineteenth century, substantially sustained by the golden age of neuroanatomy that began in the 1860s. Technical developments allowed ever finer investigation of brain structure, and it appeared to be only a matter of time before the human mind and its disorders would all be explained by functions localizable in discrete areas of brain tissue.

The optimism of biological psychiatry, however, had faded somewhat by the beginning of the twentieth century. Despite intensive efforts, neuropathology had failed to identify brain lesions in either of the two major psychiatric disorder types defined by Emil Kraepelin (1856–1926) at the end of the nineteenth century: dementia praecox, in 1908 rechristened schizophrenia by Eugen Bleuler (1857–1939), and manic depressive psychosis. Under the influence of new psychological models of mental disease, including Freud's psychoanalytic theory, and partly because it facilitated the emancipation long sought by many psychiatrists from their neurological and internist colleagues, such neuroses-brain disorders without recognized neuropathology-were largely conflated with the category of functional disorders, in which the psychopathology directly involved only psychic phenomena, at a dynamic level distinct from that of nervous tissue organization.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2012

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