| Philippe Pinel - 1806 - 368 páginas
...surprized to find manymaniacswho at no period gave evidence of any lesion of the understanding, butwho were under the dominion of instinctive and abstract fury, as if the active faculties alone sustained the injury. AN INSTANCE OF MANIACAL FURY WITHOUT DELIRIUM. 61. THE... | |
| 1836 - 522 páginas
...surprised to find many maniacs who at no period gave evidence of any lesion of the understanding, but who were under the dominion of instinctive and abstract fury, as if the active faculties alone had sustained injury.' 264 Criminal Law of Insanity. [Oct. ing influence over... | |
| James Cowles Prichard - 1835 - 514 páginas
...surprised to find many maniacs who at no period gave evidence of any lesion of the understanding, but who were under the dominion of instinctive and abstract fury, as if the active faculties alone had sustained injury." The examples given by Pinel in illustration of this remark... | |
| I. RAY, M.D. - 1838
...Participating in the common belief, he found, to his great surprise, on resuming his researches at the Bicetre, that there were many maniacs who betrayed no lesion...the affective faculties alone had sustained injury. This form of mental disorder, he designated as manie sans dtlire. The examples which he gives, being... | |
| 1839 - 698 páginas
...examining closely among the patients at the Bicetre, he found that there were many mauiacs, who evinced no lesion whatever of the understanding, but were under the dominion of instinctive fury. The reality and importance of this distinct form of insanity is now recognized by several practical... | |
| 1844 - 606 páginas
...explain all the phenomena of the sound and unsound mind, this great man found, to his great surprise, that there were many maniacs, who betrayed no lesion...the affective faculties alone had sustained injury. The most practical observers now recognise the reality and importance of the distinction between intellectual... | |
| Sir John Forbes, Alexander Tweedie, John Conolly - 1845 - 788 páginas
...surprised to find many maniacs who at no period gave evidence of any lesion of the understanding, but who were under the dominion of instinctive and abstract fury, as if the active faculties alone had sustained injury. clusively, and without any perceptible lesion of the intellectual... | |
| Isaac Ray - 1853 - 554 páginas
...Participating in the common belief, he found, to his great surprise, on resuming his researches at the BicetrS that there were many maniacs who betrayed no lesion...the affective faculties alone had sustained injury. This form of mental disorder he designated as manie sans dilire. The examples which he gives, being... | |
| 1872 - 844 páginas
...little surprised," he says,1 "to find many among the insane who at no time gave evidence of any lesion of the understanding, but were under the dominion of instinctive and abstract fury, as if the active faculties alone were impaired." Dr. Ray, however, translates " affective" instead of "active"... | |
| John Hutton Balfour Browne - 1880 - 722 páginas
...such a disease, how is it to be distinguished from immorality? Pinel was the first who ;1°5!asserted that there were " many maniacs who betrayed no lesion...moral sense, that it may coe'xist with a perfectly heathy condition of every other faculty, and that the only symptom which manifests the presence of... | |
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