Abstract
Our subject here, learning about mental illnesses, is essentially a branch of internal medicine which, because of its practical significance and for other reasons of a more external nature, has required—and has received—special treatment from time immemorial. Sadly, at the same time, it is an area that is backward in its development: It presently stands at the point where the rest of medicine was, about a 100 years ago. You will be aware that at that time an evolved pathology in the modern sense, that is, one supported by pathological disturbances in individual organs of known function, still did not exist, and that, accordingly, people ascribed the status of disease classes to certain frequently-occurring symptoms, albeit in widely varied groupings. Given such an attitude, medical knowledge of diseases did not go far beyond knowledge currently found among the lay public, when it treats coughing, palpitations, fever, jaundice, anaemia, and emaciation as actual illnesses. This is precisely the current attitude towards psychiatry, at least amongst the majority of ‘mad doctors’—its proponents. Even for them, some specific symptoms form the very essence of the disease—for example a depressed mood, in the broadest sense, is the essence of melancholy; an elevated mood with excessive movements, that of mania, and so on. People now distinguish many such types of putative disease. However, since in Nature combinations of symptoms are far more diverse and complex, it has been necessary to construct an artificial framework, sometimes more widely, and sometimes more narrowly, accomplished by different observers in very different ways. Despite all efforts to bring the cases of illness artificially into one form fitting within the framework, very many cases remain that cannot be correctly assigned, and in no way fit the framework. Indeed, anyone who can judge without bias, and has the necessary experience, will find that the great majority of cases do not conform to the normal viewpoint. I readily concede that psychiatry has demonstrated substantial progress in more recent times. Work of men like Griesinger, H. Neumann, Kahlbaum, Meynert, Emminghaus, and many others has not been in vain. Yet even these outstanding researchers all still gave in to the temptation of confusing individual symptoms with the essence of the illness; and the low level of average grasp of psychiatry even today can be assessed by the prevailing doctrine of lunacy, the merits of which are realized by a convenient nomenclature. Psychiatry today enjoys more general recognition, and this would have been welcomed as progress by a thinker like Meynert [1] in his time.
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References
Meynert T. Klinische Vorlesungen über Psychiatrie auf wissenschaftlichen Grundlagen für Studirende und Aerzte, Juristen und Psychologen. Vienna: Braumüller; 1890.
Verhandlungen des Congresses für Innere Medizin; Neunter Congress; 1890 Apr 15–18; Vienna, Austria. Wiesbaden: JF Bergmann; 1890. p. 273.
Heilbronner K. Aphasie und Geisteskrankheit. Psychiatr Abh. 1896;1:33.
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Miller, R., Dennison, J. (2015). Lecture 1. In: Miller, ONZM, B.A., B.Sc., PhD., R., Dennison, J.P., M.Sc., B.A., J. (eds) An Outline of Psychiatry in Clinical Lectures. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-18051-9_1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-18051-9_1
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