Tag: history of psychiatry


BLEULER, EUGEN (1857-1939)

EUGEN BLEULER (1857-1939): Definition, History, and Influence Eugen Bleuler was a transformative figure in 20th-century psychiatry, a Swiss physician and psychoanalyst whose work fundamentally reshaped the understanding and classification of severe mental illness. While he is most renowned for coining the term ‘schizophrenia’ in 1908—formally introduced in his seminal 1911 text, Dementia Praecox or the […]

Read More

KRAEPELIN’S THEORY

Introduction to Kraepelin’s Nosology Kraepelin’s Theory represents a monumental shift in the history of psychiatry, fundamentally redefining how mental disorders were conceptualized, classified, and studied. Originated by the influential German psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin (1856–1926) in the late 19th century, this theoretical framework moved away from purely descriptive symptomology toward a system based on underlying disease […]

Read More

METRAZOL THERAPY

Introduction and Definition of Metrazol Therapy Metrazol therapy, formally known as Pentylenetetrazol (PTZ) therapy, represents a crucial, though historically controversial, chapter in the development of biological psychiatry and the treatment of severe mental illness. This method falls under the umbrella of convulsive therapies, defined by the intentional induction of a grand mal seizure for therapeutic […]

Read More

MORAL TREATMENT

Introduction to Moral Treatment Moral Treatment represents a profound and revolutionary paradigm shift in the care and management of individuals suffering from mental illness, emerging during the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. This approach fundamentally concerns the treatment of psychiatric patients in line with strict ethical guidelines and deeply rooted humanistic principles, contrasting sharply […]

Read More