It was on July 15, 1910, that the disease Aloysius Alzheimer and
Emil Kraepelin were working on was named by Kraepelin, who gave it his colleague's moniker.
His conceptualization of schizophrenia as a spectrum of disorders of variable outcomes contrasted with that of
Emil Kraepelin's model, (3) which regarded dementia praecox as a single, homogeneous, deteriorating disease.
Dr Rasid Tahsin (1870-1936), who studied with
Emil Kraepelin (1856-1926) in Germany was the instructor of this first course on neuropsychiatry given at Mekteb-i Tibbiye-i Adliye-i Sahane (The Imperial School of Medicine) (15,16).
In order to commemorate Kraepelin's 160th birthdate and the 130th year from his first professorship, a conference "
Emil Kraepelin 160/130" was held in the same Aula where 130 years earlier Kraepelin expressed his views about explanations of psychiatric illnesses (Engstrom & Kendler 2015).
This return to thinking of mood disorders as existing on a continuum, as psychiatrist
Emil Kraepelin, MD, theorized around the turn of the last century, pivots on the decision to do away with mixed states and to instead add the mixed features specifier.
"
Emil Kraepelin, a German psychiatrist, recognized that the causes of mental illness were biological," writes Brian Krans in his 2012 essay, the History of Bipolar Disorder.
Finalmente,
Emil Kraepelin (4), no ajeno a esta problematica, escribio el poema Discordia, que entre lineas refleja mucho del sufrimiento que puede sentir la persona que opta por no estar mas entre nosotros.
Consider
Emil Kraepelin. Building on the work of fellow Germans, Kraepelin proposed in the 1890s that psychiatry was a branch of medicine and that mental disorders could be observed, identified, and classified scientifically based on syndromes--recognized and repeatable patterns of symptoms.
In its neopositivist revival of 19th century principles espoused by the notoriously biologistic German psychiatrist
Emil Kraepelin, Lane is understandably concerned that contemporary psychiatry has increasingly reduced human emotion to neurological dysfunction in need of a pharmaceutical fix, leaving little to no space for what psychoanalysis does best, namely provide a plausible sociocultural explanation for why individuals do and feel the ordinary--now, pathological --things they do.
As to my "errors": Anyone who doubts that there was any overlap between
Emil Kraepelin's psychiatry and Freud's should consult Frank Heynick's authoritative Language and its Disturbances in Dreams: The Pioneering Work of Freud and Kraepelin Updated, published by Wiley in 1993.