The American Journal of Insanity, Band 20Utica State Hospital Press, 1965 Includes section "Book reviews". |
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Seite 93
... delusion ? DR . MCFARLAND : I was merely . citing that case to show the latent form which an extreme delusion assumes . DR . TYLER : But did you not believe that the insanity existed before you discovered the delusion ? DR . MCFARLAND ...
... delusion ? DR . MCFARLAND : I was merely . citing that case to show the latent form which an extreme delusion assumes . DR . TYLER : But did you not believe that the insanity existed before you discovered the delusion ? DR . MCFARLAND ...
Seite 94
... delusion exactly as I judge of the delusion itself — that it is a consistent description of the state of her own mind for the last eighteen years , the inception of the disease , its growth , & c . I believe in my paper it is stated ...
... delusion exactly as I judge of the delusion itself — that it is a consistent description of the state of her own mind for the last eighteen years , the inception of the disease , its growth , & c . I believe in my paper it is stated ...
Seite 319
... delusion . " The true test of the absence or presence of insanity , " says Sir John Nicholl upon this point , " I take to be the absence or presence of what , used in a certain sense of it , is comprisable in a sin- gle term , namely ...
... delusion . " The true test of the absence or presence of insanity , " says Sir John Nicholl upon this point , " I take to be the absence or presence of what , used in a certain sense of it , is comprisable in a sin- gle term , namely ...
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admission admitted affected alienists appear Association believe Bloomingdale Asylum brain building cachectic called cause cerebral character charge Chipley circumstances colon condition constipation courts death delusion dementia digitalis discharged disorder disturbance doubt evidence excitement exhibited existence experience expression fact faculties feelings feet frequently friends hospital human idiopathic impairment indications influence instances institution intel intellectual intestinal jury labor less Lunacy Lunatic Asylum malady mania manifested matter McFarland means medicine melancholia ment mental disease mind monomania months moral insanity moral treatment morbid nature nervous never Nichols observed Ophelia opinion organ Orillia passed patients peculiar Pennsylvania Hospital period person physician physiognomy practical present President proof question reason recovered recovery regard relations result sane seems sion suffering suicide Superintendent suppose symptoms tendency testamentary capacity thought tion transverse colon treatment TYLER wards witness