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Heirs of Hippocrates

The Development of Medicine in a Catalogue of Historic Books

Complete Record - Heirs of Hippocrates No. 1268

JEAN ETIENNE DOMINIQUE ESQUIROL (1772-1840) Des maladies mentales considérées sous les rapports médical, hygiénique et médico-légal. J. B. Tircher 1838 Vol. I: vii, 393 pp.; Vol. II: vi, 380 pp., 27 plates (1 fold.). 22.6 cm.

As Pinel's (see No. 1070) most outstanding pupil, Esquirol so closely followed his teacher's works that the contributions of the two men are sometimes confused. Like Pinel, Esquirol did not attempt to analyze mental illness from a philosophical standpoint but sought to classify and describe the various kinds of insanity he encountered in his practice. Esquirol coined the term monomania, a concept which anticipated the modern view of schizophrenia, and he was the first to distinguish hallucination from illusion. While at Salpêtrière, where he succeeded Pinel as chief physician, Esquirol introduced formal instruction in psychiatry and gained support for Pinel's humanitarian reform movements by lecturing throughout Europe. Des maladies mentales, the work for which he is best known, served as a basic text in psychiatry for over fifty years.

See Related Record(s): 1070

Cited references: Garrison-Morton 4798 (Paris ed., 1838); Waller 2817; Wellcome II, p. 531

Gift of John Martin, M.D.

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