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‘A plastic power ministering to organisation’: interpretations of the mind–body relation in late nineteenth-century British psychiatry
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 July 2009
Synopsis
Late nineteenth-century medico-psychological approaches to the mind–body problem are discussed in relation to psychiatry's theoretical constitution as a distinct ‘mind–body’ science and practice, and to John Hughlings Jackson's ‘doctrine of concomitance’. Psychiatric ‘explanations’ of the mind–body relation are interpreted as expressions of psychiatry's independent professional interests vis-à-vis neurology and general medicine.
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- Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1983
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