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Bénédict Morel

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284:. In his work, he included images of twelve patients that demonstrated the physical, mental, and moral traits that were evidence of degeneration. Some of these characteristics included altered ear shape, asymmetrical faces, extra digits, and high-domed palates that had psychological representations as well. Morel's work was well received. It connected psychiatric medicine to general medicine to provide a complete and well-researched cause for a large social problem. It became dominant because it grounded moral treatment, which was questionable in this time period, in science. Morel's theory also allowed psychiatrists who were unable to help their patients explain why they had not been successful. Degeneration theory meant that there were some psychological disorders that were genetic and could not be cured by a psychiatrist. It also explained all psychological disorders. If a psychiatrist could not find a physical cause of the disease, they could blame it on the individual's constitution. It quickly spread throughout Europe with key figures spreading the information and using it to explain criminal psychology, personality disorders, and nervous disorders. Wilhem Griesinger introduced Morel's theory to Germany, Valentin Magnan helped his ideas spread in France, and Cesare Lambroso brought Morel's theory to Italy. In the 1880s, Morel's degeneration theory was very important in French psychiatry and the majority of diagnostic certificates in French mental hospitals involved the words mental degeneracy. 273:
increase. Morel's Catholic and radical political background greatly shaped his process. Morel noticed that the patients in the mental asylum with intellectual disability also had physical abnormalities like goiters. He was able to expand this idea when he noticed most people in the asylum had unusual physical characteristics. Morel's degeneration theory was based on the idea that psychological disorders and other behavioral abnormalities were caused by an abnormal constitution. This also meant that he believed that there was a perfect type of human that degenerations altered. He believed that these abnormalities could be inherited and that there was a progressive worsening of the degeneration by generation. These traits were not specified pathologies, but rather an overall abnormality like a highly susceptible nervous system to disturbances from excessive toxins. The first generation started with neurosis, then, in the next generation, mental alienation. After the second generation, the mental alienation led to imbecility. Finally, the fourth generation was destined to be sterile.
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developments. It was used as the basis of body typology and disposition theories as well as Lombroso's theory of anthropological criminology. His theory was highly ideological and provided a scientific rationale for the eugenics programs used by the Nazis. He is also known for generating research programs to understand the effects of paternal drinking on children. Morel's degeneration theory is a key influence on Émile Zola's Les Rougon-Macquart about the environmental influences of violence, prostitution, and other immoral activities on two branches of a family during the Industrial Revolution. In Britain, the degeneration theory bolstered the eugenics and Social Darwinism movement. Karl Pearson and Sidney Webb justified selective breeding and immigration in Britain by trying to prevent the degeneration of the British race. Not all theorists accepted Morel's work. Sigmund Freud,
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in the slums. Due to the law of progressivity, these degenerations would get worse in each generation to produce more criminals and neurotics with worse degenerations. Over time, the degenerations would progress until later generations (specifically the fourth generation) were so idiotic that they were essentially sterile and the abnormal family would die out. This theory explained why there was an increase in mental disorders and also allowed Morel to relate very different diseases as caused by previous generations because they had become more variable over time. Since there was an increase in mental disorders, Morel believed that society was approaching extinction of the imbeciles. He believed that the most degenerative illness was insanity. Morel was able to categorize degenerations into four main categories: hysteria, moral insanity, imbeciles, and idiots.
31: 167:. Here he introduced reforms towards the welfare of the mentally ill, in particular liberalization of restraining practices. At the Maréville asylum he studied people with mental disabilities, researching their family histories and investigating aspects such as poverty and childhood physical illnesses. In 1856 he was appointed director of the mental asylum at 292:
Morel is regarded as the father of dementia praecox and the degeneration theory. Both of these ideas helped understand mental illness as it was on the rise in 19th and 20th century France. Morel's degeneration theory gained quick popularity across Europe, which allowed it to shape further scientific
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In Morel's theory, degeneration was synonymous with anything that was different from the natural or normal state. These abnormalities were caused by environmental influences like diet, disease, and moral depravities or traits that were passed from generation to generation like alcoholism and living
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which was published in 1860. Morel used the term in a descriptive sense and not to define a specific and novel diagnostic category. It was applied as a means of setting apart a group of young men and women who had "stupor." As such their condition was characterised by a certain torpor, enervation,
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in the 1850s. He began to develop his theory while he was the director of the mental asylum at Saint-Yon in northern France. In 19th century France, there was an increase in crime, sickness, and mental disorders, which interested Morel. He was determined to identify the underlying causes of this
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and Kraepelin, Morel's term had vanished without a trace and there is little evidence to suggest that either Pick or indeed Kraepelin were even aware of Morel's use of the term until long after they had published their own disease concepts bearing the same name. As
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disease concept. This is due to the fact that their concepts of dementia differed significantly from each other, with Kraepelin employing the more modern sense of the word, and also that Morel was not describing a diagnostic category. Indeed, until the advent of
297:, Adolf Meyer, and Oswald Bumke rejected his ideas. Overall, while Morel's degeneration theory is considered outdated by modern psychiatrists, Morel is credited with creating the modern biological approach to understanding psychiatric disorders. 182:, saw mental deficiency as the end stage of a process of mental deterioration. In the 1850s, he developed a theory of "degeneration" in regards to mental problems that take place from early life to adulthood. In 1857 he published 150:
Morel received his education in Paris, and while a student, supplemented his income by teaching English and German classes. In 1839 he earned his medical doctorate, and two years later became an assistant to psychiatrist
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Morel's interest in psychiatry was further enhanced in the mid-1840s when he visited several mental institutions throughout Europe. In 1848 he was appointed director of the Asile d'Aliénés de Maréville at
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Lund, M (December 1996). "On Morel's 'épilepsie larvée: the first Danish epileptologist Frederik Hallager's opposition in 1884 against Morel's psychical epileptic equivalents".
455:). In the first instance the reference is made in relation to young girls of asthenic build who have often also had typhoid. It is a description and not a diagnostic category ( 431:
in positing that senility is not an age specific condition and he also remarks that at his clinic he sees almost as many young people affected by senility as old people (
832: 463:). In the next instance the term is used to argue that the illness course for those who have mania does not normally terminate in an early form of dementia ( 238:, others have argued convincingly that Morel's descriptive use of the term should not be considered in any sense as a precursor to the German psychiatrist 849:
Schuster, Jean-Pierre; Le Strat, Yann; Krichevski, Violetta; Bardikoff, Nicole; Limosin, Frédéric (2011-02-01). "Benedict Augustin Morel (1809–1873)".
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Schuster, Jean-Pierre; Le Strat, Yann; Krichevski, Violetta; Bardikoff, Nicole; Limosin, Frédéric (2011-02-01). "Benedict Augustin Morel (1809–1873)".
399:, p. 46. Berrios, Luque and Villagran contend in their 2003 article on schizophrenia that Morel's first use dates to the publication in 1860 of 587:, p. 117), others baldly state that Kraepelin was clearly inspired by Morel's lead. Yet no evidence of this claim is offered. For example, 1196: 1104: 1027: 944: 186:, a treatise in which he explains the nature, causes, and indications of human degeneration. Morel looked for answers to mental illness in 1037: 973:
Dowbiggin, Ian (1996). "Back to the future: Valentin Magnan, French psychiatry, and the classification of mental diseases, 1885–1925'".
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Traité des dégénérescences physiques, intellectuelles et morales de l'espèce humaine et des causes qui produisent ces variétés maladives
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Traité des dégénérescences physiques, intellectuelles et morales de l'espèce humaine et des causes qui produisent ces variétés maladives
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in passing to describe the characteristics of a subset of young patients, and he employed the phrase more frequently in his textbook
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Morel, influenced by various pre-Darwinian theories of evolution, particularly those that attributed a powerful role to
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was a traditional and distinctly non-modern one in the sense that he did not conceptualise it as irreversible state.
411:). Dowbiggin inaccurately states that Morel used the term on page 234 of the first volume of his 1852 publication 1263: 658: 1223: 1258: 1273: 439:). Also, as Hoenig accurately states, Morel uses the term twice in his 1852 text on pages 282 and 361 ( 140: 952:
Conti, Norberto Aldo (2003). "Benedict Augustin Morel and the origin of the term dementia praecox".
532: 528: 524: 520: 516: 512: 508: 309:. two volumes; Paris, 1852–1853; second edition, 1860. (In the second edition he coined the term 1002:
Hoenig, J (1995). "Schizophrenia: clinical section". In Berrios, German E.; Porter, Roy (eds.).
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Le no-restraint ou de l'abolition des moyens coercitifs dans le traitement de la folie
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While some have sought to interpret, if in a qualified fashion, Morel's reference to
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Traité des dégénérescence physiques, intellectuelles, et morales de l'espèce humaine
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Traité des dégénérescence physiques, intellectuelles, et morales de l'espèce humaine
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A History of Clinical Psychiatry: The Origin and History of Psychiatric Disorders
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The Discovery Of The Unconscious: The History And Evolution Of Dynamic Psychiatry
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and disorder of the will and was related to the diagnostic category of
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Abel, Ernest L. (2004-12-01). "Benedict-Augustin Morel (1809–1873)".
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Abel, Ernest L. (2004-12-01). "Benedict-Augustin Morel (1809–1873)".
633: 168: 115:(22 November 1809 – 30 March 1873) was a French psychiatrist born in 73: 848: 721: 565: 553: 224: 187: 1227: 1146:
Faces of degeneration : a European disorder, c. 1848-c. 1918
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While Berrios, Luque and Villagran argue this point forcefully (
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Berrios, German E.; Luque, Rogelio; Villagran, Jose M. (2003).
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Mahieu, Eduardo Luis (2004). "On Morel and dementia praecox".
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The American Psychiatric Publishing Textbook of Schizophrenia
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International Journal of Psychology and Psychological Therapy
172: 1148:(1st pbk. ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 543: 541: 119:, Austria. He was an influential figure in the field of 538: 764: 335:
De la formation des types dans les variétés dégénérées
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Du goître et du crétinisme, étiologie, prophylaxie etc
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Abbé Dupont and his servant Marianne, who raised him.
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Morel was abandoned by his parents, and left with the
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Ellenberger, Henri F.; Ellenberger, F. (2008-08-05).
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In 1857, Morel published his degeneration theory in
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in 1809, of French parents. In the aftermath of the
348: 1235: 256:succinctly stated, 'An abyss separates Morel's 1167:. In Lieberman, Jeffrey A.; Stroup, T. Scott; 1165:"History of schizophrenia and its antecedents" 16:Austrian-born French psychiatrist (1809–1873) 1228:Biographical Archive of Psychiatry (BIAPSY) 1038:Journal of the History of the Neurosciences 656: 1195:: CS1 maint: location missing publisher ( 1103:: CS1 maint: location missing publisher ( 1026:: CS1 maint: location missing publisher ( 943:: CS1 maint: location missing publisher ( 972: 547: 416: 487:is used by Morel once in his 1857 text 300: 1236: 1065: 1001: 792: 790: 788: 440: 392: 263: 1162: 1132: 1111: 1086: 951: 920:Schizophrenia: A Scientific Delusion? 916: 899:"Schizophrenia: a conceptual history" 682: 680: 678: 657:Schwarz, Julian; Brückner, Burkhart. 628: 626: 624: 622: 620: 618: 616: 614: 588: 504: 492: 464: 456: 444: 432: 420: 408: 396: 1224:Biography of Benedict Augustin Morel 1143: 1034: 796: 686: 427:). On page 235] Morel does refer to 366: 354: 1222:Julian Schwarz, Burkhart Brückner: 785: 606:Berrios, Luque & Villagran 2003 585:Berrios, Luque & Villagran 2003 572:Berrios, Luque & Villagran 2003 560:Berrios, Luque & Villagran 2003 499:) and seven times in his 1860 book 234:as amounting to the "discovery" of 13: 675: 611: 481:Berrios, Luque & Villagran2003 405:Berrios, Luque & Villagran2003 372: 193: 14: 1285: 1205: 313:to refer to mental degeneration). 1068:Vertex (Buenos Aires, Argentina) 954:Vertex (Buenos Aires, Argentina) 863:10.1111/j.1601-5215.2010.00506.x 736:10.1111/j.1601-5215.2010.00506.x 29: 1269:People from the Austrian Empire 842: 825: 758: 715: 650: 598: 1254:19th-century French physicians 799:American Journal of Psychiatry 689:American Journal of Psychiatry 577: 474: 386: 1: 123:during the mid-19th century. 1175:. Arlington. pp. 1–15. 1136:Traité des maladies mentales 811:10.1176/appi.ajp.161.12.2185 771:. Basic Books. p. 281. 701:10.1176/appi.ajp.161.12.2185 501:Traité des maladies mentales 401:Traité des maladies mentales 383:whonamedit.com (ohne Datum). 307:Traité des maladies mentales 268:Morel is known for creating 216:Traité des maladies mentales 126: 7: 1006:. London. pp. 336–48. 210:(1852) Morel used the term 206:In the first volume of his 10: 1290: 1163:Stone, Michael H. (2006). 975:Social History of Medicine 889: 659:"Morel, Bénédict Augustin" 317:Traité des Dégénérescences 199: 141:War of the Sixth Coalition 1051:10.1080/09647049609525673 287: 260:from that of Kraepelin.' 106: 96: 89: 81: 58: 40: 28: 21: 1118:. Paris: J.B. Balliere. 923:(2nd ed.). London. 483:, p. 117. The term 380:Bénédict Augustin Morel. 341: 337:. Volume 1; Rouen, 1864. 1213:Bénédict Augustin Morel 223:. His understanding of 113:Bénédict Augustin Morel 1264:French epileptologists 851:Acta Neuropsychiatrica 724:Acta Neuropsychiatrica 1144:Pick, Daniel (1993). 1259:French psychiatrists 1133:Morel, B.A. (1860). 1112:Morel, B.A. (1857). 1087:Morel, B.A. (1852). 917:Boyle, Mary (2002). 301:Partial bibliography 1139:. Paris: V. Masson. 987:10.1093/shm/9.3.383 270:degeneration theory 264:Degeneration theory 155:(1794–1870) at the 121:degeneration theory 1274:French eugenicists 153:Jean-Pierre Falret 131:Morel was born in 1169:Perkins, Diana O. 1013:978-0-485-24011-5 369:, pp. 44–45. 110: 109: 91:Scientific career 1281: 1200: 1194: 1186: 1159: 1140: 1129: 1108: 1102: 1094: 1093:. Vol. 1. 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Index


Vienna
Austrian Empire
Saint-Yon
psychiatry
Vienna
degeneration theory
Vienna
Austria
War of the Sixth Coalition
Luxembourgish
Jean-Pierre Falret
Salpêtrière
Nancy
Saint-Yon
Rouen
acclimation
heredity
dementia praecox
melancholia
dementia
schizophrenia
Emil Kraepelin
dementia praecox
Arnold Pick
Eugène Minkowski
degeneration theory
Karl Jaspers
Pick 1993
Pick 1993

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