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Daniel Paul Schreber

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Daniel [[Paul ]] Schreber, the [[subject ]] of [[Freud]]'s famous retrospective [[case ]] [[history]], was [[born ]] on July 15, 1842, in Leipzig, and died in April 1911 in the [[state ]] [[mental ]] asylum at Leipzig-Dösen.In 1893 Paul was at the zenith of his [[legal ]] career, having just been promoted to presiding judge at the Dresden Higher Regional Court, when he suffered a severe mental breakdown. Thereafter he spent [[about ]] thirteen years of his [[life ]] in mental institutions, and while at the Sonnenstein Asylum he composed his only book, ''Memoirs of My Nervous [[Illness]]''...
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[[Sigmund Freud]] defined [[psychoanalysis]] as the "[[science]] of the [[unconscious]]" (''[[Wissenschaft]] des Unbewussten''). The use of the [[German]] term ''Wissenschaft'' suggests a [[particular]] mode of [[understanding]]: ''Wissenschaft'' is constituted as a [[system]] of [[knowledge]] organized into a coherent and ordered arrangement of fundamental [[concepts]] ([[doctrine]]), capable of accounting for empirically observed phenomena (the [[objects]] of possible experiments) by means of a method that ensures their intelligibility and verification through controlled reproduction...
[[Category:Psychoanalysis]]
[[Category:Sigmund Freud]]
[[Category:Jacques Lacan]]
 
Schreber, 36, 93, 184, 188-192, 199-221 [[Ecrits]]
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