Tag: psychological history


The Melancholic Temperament: Understanding Your Inner Depth

The Melancholic Temperament: Understanding Your Inner Depth

Introduction and Historical Context The Melancholic Type represents one of the four cardinal temperaments established within the classical tradition of medicine, a system formalized primarily by Galen of Pergamon (c. 129–210 CE) based on the foundational theories of Hippocrates. This classification system, which dominated Western understanding of personality and pathology for over eighteen centuries, posits […]

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Conversion Disorder: When Trauma Becomes Physical

Conversion Disorder: When Trauma Becomes Physical

Historical Context and Definition Conversion hysteria stands as a profoundly significant, albeit outdated, term within the history of psychiatry and clinical psychology, representing a cluster of conditions where psychological distress manifests as physical or neurological symptoms without identifiable organic pathology. Historically, it served as a previous title for what is currently known in modern diagnostic […]

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