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  • ...-called 'neo-Kraepelinian' categories (named after the psychiatrist [[Emil Kraepelin]], the [[father]] of descriptive psychiatry). While psychiatrists may [[cla ...icine, combining medicine and [[practical]] psychology. The work of [[Emil Kraepelin]] laid the foundations of scientific psychiatry. A neurologist, [[Sigmund F
    23 KB (3,126 words) - 21:30, 20 May 2019
  • ...ent of the population; its distribution is worldwide. A century after Emil Kraepelin created the diagnosis of [[dementia]] praecox and its extensive symptomolog ...zophrenia was [[thought]] from the start to have an [[organic]] basis, but Kraepelin was [[forced]] describe it as a "functional disorder." Early age of onset a
    7 KB (979 words) - 22:37, 20 May 2019
  • Emil Kraepelin, in the eighth edition of [[Dementia]] Praecox and Paraphrenia (1919), whic ...e term than [[schizophrenia]], the term Eugen Bleuler suggested to replace Kraepelin's dementia praecox. He used it for the first [[time]] in his "[[Psycho]]-[[
    4 KB (479 words) - 20:41, 20 May 2019
  • ...supplied an affirmative answer to this question. In short, Lacan endorsed Kraepelin's inclination toward a psychogenetic conception of paranoia, and what Lacan
    13 KB (1,870 words) - 19:53, 27 May 2019
  • ...culminated in the [[concept]] of dementia praecox in the [[work]] of Emil Kraepelin. The second definition concerns altered states in [[memory]] and ideation f ..."vesanic dementia" (the culmination of [[psychotic]] [[development]]) and Kraepelin's [[three]] forms of dementia praecox: hebephrenic, catatonic, and [[parano
    4 KB (581 words) - 21:48, 27 May 2019