Kurt Schneider (1887–1967): First- and Second- Rank Symptoms, Not Pathognomonic of Schizophrenia, Explained by Psychotic Mood DisordersKurt Schneider was born in 1887 in Crailsheim, Kingdom of Wurttemberg. He went to medical school in Berlin and Tubingen. After serving in World War I, he ...
first‐rank symptomsagesexschizoaffective psychosesatypical psychosesAbstract: Even in a Schneider‐oriented university clinic, the majority of thediagnoses "schizophrenia" are based on non‐first‐rank symptoms. About one‐fifth of the cases diagnosed as having schizophrenia showed nonproductive symptoms ...
Even in a Schneider‐oriented university clinic, the majority of thediagnoses "schizophrenia" are based on non‐first‐rank symptoms. About one‐fifth of the cases diagnosed as having schizophrenia showed nonproductive symptoms such as disturbances of thought, of affect and of behavior. But the ...
Kurt Schneider, 1887-1967.Profiles psychiatrist Kurt Schneider. Devotion of life to learning; Works on the diagnosis of schizophrenia and first-rank symptoms; Publication of ideas and works; Effects on peers and students.HuberGerdAmerican Journal of Psychiatry...
An understanding of his general approach to psychiatry will lead to a deeper understanding of the significance of the first rank symptoms, a topic which has aroused widespread interest in English psychiatric research.doi:10.1016/0010-440X(82)90152-3J. Hoenig...
Kurt Schneider (1887鈥 1967) was a prominent German psychiatrist of the Heidelberg school who elaborated and systematically applied the phenomenological method to the detailed and communicable elicitation of the patients' subjective experiences. He is widely known for his description of "first-rank" ...