The timeline of schizophrenia is a list of significant events in the creation, definition, development and continued redefinition of the diagnostic category "schizophrenia", as was originally created by the doctors of Burgholzli, the hospital clinic of the University of Zurich, during an approximately eleven year period beginning in the early 20th century.

2022: The pathogenesis of schizophrenia is unknown. [1]

2021:

The etiology of schizophrenia is unknown.[2]

2019: ICD 11th revision:The World Health Organisation ICD classification: primary psychotic disorder 6A20 Schizophrenia. For schizophrenia to be diagnosed depends on the existence for most of a 1 month duration 2 of (a) - (g) of which one of the two must be (a) - (d): Persistent delusions (a), and, or, hallucinations (b), disorganized thinking (c), experiences of influence, passivity or control (d), Negative symptoms such as affective flattening, alogia or paucity of speech, avolition, asociality and anhedonia (e), grossly disorganized behaviour that impedes goal-directed activity (f), psychomotor disturbances (g)[3][4]

2014: the Mandarin name for schizophrenia in Taiwan is changed to a word with a new meaning: “disorder with dysfunction of thought and perception” [5]

2013: DSM-5 is published. There are no tests for the purpose of diagnosis using a laboratory or by psychometric methods. Neurological imaging, pathology, and physiology research indicates the presence of abnormalities within the brain, but "none are diagnostic".[6] Schizophrenia has the Diagnostic Criteria codes: 295.90 (F20.9), and is within the group: Schizophrenia Spectrum and other psychotic disorders [7]

2012: The Korean term for schizophrenia (jungshinbunyeolbyung / jeongshin-bunyeol-byung: mind-split disorder) is changed to attunement disorder by the Korean Neuropsychiatric Association. The concept of the replacement word was inspired by the text of a South Korean monk written during 1579.[8][9]

2010: a review of existing literature on the benefit of lesion generation by stereotactic neurosurgery for schzophrenia (general anxiety disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, bipolar disorder, depression, schizoaffective disorder, addiction) found schizophrenia (and addiction) had the least improvement from surgery. Of the techniques utilised cingulotomy provided the most benefit, although "all lesional techniques confounded".[10][11][12][13]

2002: In Japan, the translation of the word schizophrenia in discontinued, replaced by Japanese words which mean "integration disorder" or ‘disintegration disorder’[14][15][16][17]

2001: the term for schizophrenia in Hong Kong (jing-shen-fen-lie: 'mental split-mind disorder' / splitting of the mind) is changed to si-jue-shi-tiao.[18][9]

1997: an explanation for schizophrenia by neural diathesis-stress is made by Walker & Diforio via "a substantive literature on the behavioral effects of psychosocial stressors" and recent studies on "hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis" cortisol activation[19][20]

1994: DSM-IV is published. Schizophrenia is encoded as 295, with the types: Catatonic, Disorganised, Paranoid, Residual, Schizophreniform, Undifferentiated [21][22]

1990: ICD 10th revision: encodes "(F20-F29)" with the descriptions: "Schizophrenia, schizotypal and delusional disorders" [23][24] The diagnostic concept is divided: Catatonic, Cenesthopathic, Hebephrenic, Paranoid, Residual, Schizophreniform, Simple, Undifferentiated, unspecified.[25]

1982: Irwin Feinberg proposes the hypothesis that a cause of schizophrenia is correlation to reduction in synaptic density within the cortex of the brain of adolescent aged individuals.[26][27][28]

1980: DSM-III is published. Diagnosis of schizophrenia depends on the existence of one of (1) - (6) for at least six months: (1): bizarre delusions (2): somatic, grandiose, religious, nihilistic, or other delusions without persecutery or jealous content (3): delusions with persecutory or jealous content if accompanied by hallucinations of any type (4): auditory hallucinations in which either a voice keeps up a running commentary on the individual's behavior or thoughts, or two or more voices converse with each other (5): auditory hallucinations on several occasions with content of more than one or two words (6): incoherence, marked loosening of associations, markedly illogical thinking, or marked poverty of content of speech if associated with at least one of the following: (a) blunted, flat, or inappropriate affect (b) delusions or hallucinations (c) catatonic or other grossly disorganized behavior. Encoded as 295 with the types: Disorganized, Catatonic, Paranoid, Undifferentiated, Residual.[29]

1976: the first tomography study of schizophrenia[30][31]

1975: ICD 9th revision: "(295-299) Other psychoses" "295 Schizophrenic psychoses" [32][24]

1972: philosopher Gilles Deleuze and psychoanalyst and political activist Félix Guattari first publish on the subject of "anti-Oedipus" with Capitalism and schizophrenia, as a critique of conventional psychiatric and psychoanalytic practices.[33][34][35]

1968: DSM-II is published. Schizophrenia is within the group: Psychoses not attributed to physical conditions previously listed. The diagnostic code is 295. The concept is divided into the types: acute schizophrenic episode, catatonic, childhood, chronic undifferentiated, hebephrenic, latent, other (and unspecified) types, paranoid, residual, schizo-affective, simple.[36]

1966: Jacques Van Rossum proposes that a more than normally active or more stimulated anatomical receptors for the cerebrally neurotransmitting biochemical catecholamine dopamine could be an etiology. Catecholamines are synthesized in the adrenal medulla.[37][38][39][40]

1965: ICD 8th revision: "(290-299) Psychoses" of which the codes "295.0 - .9" are for "Schizophrenia" [41][24]

1955: International Classification of Diseases (ICD) 7th revision: "Psychoses": 300.0-.7: "Schizophrenic disorders (dementia præcox)"[42]

1952: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-I: "Psychoses": 300.0-.8: "Schizophrenic disorders (dementia præcox)" [43]

1950: Monograph Series on Schizophrenia No. 1 Dementia Praecox or the Group of Schizophrenias, an English language translation by J. Zinkin of Dr Bleuler's 1911 work is published [44]

1948: International Lists of Diseases and Causes of Death 6th revision: Dementia (309): Dementia praecox (schizophrenia) (300.7) / Schizophrenia, schizophrenic (insanity) (psychosis) (reaction) 300.7 [45]

1945: about 40,000 psychiatric patients of 283,000 patients with various diagnoses during 1939 in Germany aren't dead [46]

1941:

Rümke's idea praecox feeling for diagnosing schizophrenia [46]

senior physician at Friedmatt, the Department of Psychiatry of the University of Basel and battalion physician of the Swiss army Dr Manfred Bleuler finds, from a "eugenic standpoint", sterilisation is necessary from the results of a hereditary study of "316 hospitalized schiophrenics and their 11410 relatives"[47][48][49]

1940 JANUARY: 1st group of psychiatric patients killed by carbon monoxide gas in Germany [46][50]

1939 SEPTEMBER 23: Dr Freud dies by euthanasia effected by an overdose of morphine as a consequence of the pathological effects of tobacco and the psychoactive nicotine (an addiction) in addition to or without cocaine, which were precipitative of oral cancer, diagnosed during 1923.[51][52][53][54][55][56]

1939 SEPTEMBER after 1: organization of the deaths of patients with schizophrenia directly caused by the German government.[46][nb 1]

1939 JULY 15: Dr Bleuler dies[68][69]

1939: FRS are included in a monograph by Schneider [70] Schneider's idea of Second Rank Symptoms include "Wahneinfall, thought inhibition (slowing or poverty of thought), flight of ideas, incoherence or dilapidation (Zerfahrenheit), compulsion".[71] The word Zerfahrenheit was created by Dr Kraepelin as the sole sign necessary for recognition of all possible forms of dementia praecox.[72]

1938 OCTOBER 3–7: ILCD 5th revision (in Europe and after the United States): Mental disorders and deficiency: "84b", defined as: "Schizophrenia (dementia praecox)" [73][24][74]

1938: Kurt Schneider mentions his idea of symptoms (First Rank Symptoms: FRS) in a conference in Berlin [70][75][76][77][78][79][80][81][82]

1937:

the publically known correspondance of Professor Bleuler and Dr Freud concludes with 26 letters written by Dr Freud, 53 by Professor Bleuler[83]

Schizophrenia in Japan commences to exist by the transferal of the concept by the approval of a translation of the term by a committee within the Japanese Society for Psychiatry and Neurology [17]

Langfeldt describes schizophrenia as “process" or alternatively (for the same considerations) "nuclear" [84][85][86]

1936 FEBRUARY: developed by A C de A F Egas Moniz; the first operative treatment by psycho-neurosurgical intervention, which is by leukotomy, is performed on patients including a patient or patients (psychiatric clinic Bombarda, Lisbon) with a diagnosis of schizophrenia. Almeida Lima was the surgeon by the direction of E Moniz, the procedure consists of an injection of alcohol into the brain white matter.[87][88]

1934: Patients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia, which is approximately 26% of the total in Germany, are made unable to produce children via sterilisation [89]

1933 JULY 14: the German government make a law that people diagnosed with "Schizophrenia" can be sterilised.[90][46] [nb 2]

1932: the President of the Royal Society of Medicine in preambulatory speech states that schizophrenia is a "reaction-type"[93][nb 3]

1929: International List of Causes of Death (ILCD 4th revision): "84a" the description for this code is: "Dementia praecox" [100][24] [nb 4]

1924:

Dr Bleuler supports ideas of eugenics.[106]

diagnosis by feelings: Ludwig Binswanger[107][108]

1923: Dr Bleuler differentiates process and reactive schizophrenia [109]

1920: Bertillon Committee for the International Statistical Institute (ISI 3rd revision) list: 84(1) Idiocy, Imbecility" [110][24][111]

1919 before FEBRUARY 20: schizophrenia as a diagnostic term is used within America in Boston Psychopathic Hospital by Bullard Professor in Neuropathology at Harvard Medical School E. E. Southard.[112][113]

1914: Erwin Stransky describes intrapsychic ataxia [114][nb 5]

1913:

Dementia praecox is accepted by "most British psychiatrists"[117]

Dr Kraepelin provides his most detailed description of schizophrenia[118]

1912: The government of Switzerland is the first country outside of the United States of America to produce a eugenics law: it becomes illegal for those diagnosed as mentally ill to marry[119][120]

1911:

Dr Bleuler's German language work: Dementia Praecox oder Gruppe der Schizophrenien is published in Leipzig & Vienna.[121][122][nb 6] Schizophrenia is a group of diseases not a sole disease. The groupings (paranoid, hebrephrenic, simple, catatonic) are entities constructed for nosology purposes not as descriptions of nature [123]

  • Association-splitting is a primary symptom, the secondary symptoms of sz happen because of "loosening of the associations".[124][125][126] Disturbance of associations is the "main primary symptom"[127][75] "Schizophrenic splitting" per se is "only" an "exaggerated" form of existing healthy "physiological processess" (sic).[128][129]
  • For treatment Dr Bleuler considers the best option available is occupation by work, even if the patient is within the acute stage, if not this, then sport, if neither are possible then preoccupation with games. Work provides the patient the opportunity to escape from an autistic existence.[130]
  • Dr Bleuler's theory of the symptoms but not the causes of schizophrenia used psychology analysis ideas invented by Dr Sigmund Freud.[131][132][133][134][135][136][137][138] Dr Bleuler wrote for his 1911 text that an "important aspect" of the Dr and the Dr's colleagues theory of concepts of the psychology of pathology (this is the "psychopathology") of schizophrenia was the "application of Freud's ideas to dementia praecox".[139][140][141][142][143][144][145]
  • Dr Bleuler expresses his "hope" that sterilisation will be used in certain circumstances with regards to those diagnosed with schizophrenia "for eugenic reasons".[146]

Dr Freud's hypothesis that schizophrenia is an "inability to maintain libidinal cathexis of objects"[147]

Dr Ballet describes the nosology psychose hallucinatoire chronique[148][149]

1910: ILCD 2: Bertillon Committee for the International Statistical Institute: 67 General paralysis of the insane 68 Other forms of mental alienation 74 (A.B.C.D.) Other diseases of the nervous system 74A Idiocy, imbecility [150][24][151]

1909 MARCH 7: work at the clinic of Zürich by the direction of Dr Jung under he direction of Dr Bleuler: experiments on "word-association", is concluded by Dr Jung's resignation. The doctors who did the experiments were Dr Bleuler (clinic director), Dr Jung, Dr Riklin, Dr Fürst, Dr Binswanger, Dr Nunberg, Dr Wehrlin[152][153]

1908:

APRIL 24: the term "schizophrenie" is first used at a Deutscher Verein für Psychiatrie (German Association for Psychiatry) conference in Berlin by Dr Bleuler, in a lecture entitled 'Prognosis of Dementia Praecox (Group of Schizophrenias)'. Dr Bleuler's concept is from an approximately eight year study of 647 patients [154][155][156][157][158][nb 7] The conference was the first time the Association had convened to discuss specifically dementia praecox. Maximilian Jahrmärker spoke on the ease of the diagnosing and differentiating from other psychoses of d. praecox.[172]

Wolff proposes dysphrenie as a type of mental disorder [57][58]

1907:

Indiana (in the United States of America) is the first place in the world to make a eugenics-law for the sterilisation of "idiots" and "imbeciles" [120][173]

Dr Carl Jung's work on the psychology of Dementia Praecox is published.[174] The work contains no direct reference to schizophrenia.[175] Dr Jung refers to "dissociation (Binet, Janet)" as a "weakness of consciousness due to the splitting-off of one or a series of ideas". Dr Jung discusses Otto Gross's "synchronous series" as consciousness if affected by disease in the lexicon of the "French School" which is that "associations" are "split-off", and that a split-off series of ideas occur in hysteria [176] in situations of hypnotism and with the somnambulists.[177][178][179] Dr Jung explicitly associates a "split off series of ideas" with "Freud and Gross".[180] Dr Jung in discussion of organisms sans brain, and, catatonia, in relation to automatism (the "reflex machine") propounds the notion that the reality of the catatonic state is of a complex in the mind split off ("unassailable") from any external psychological stimuli [181] In discussion of Paranoid Dementia, with reference specifically to "hysterics with dissociation of consciousness", in a first state of one consciousness, the existence of a second subsequent state of consciousness (in a temporal sequence) will not occur in the hysterics consciousness normally, and instead, the "force" of the second state of consciousness is expressed as hallucination or "other automatisms", as a split-off complex disturbing another complex. The disturbance is compared (with reference to Flournoy) as the disturance of an invisible planet in orbit to a visible planet. Split off thoughts coalesce ("crowd themselves") into consciousness forming hallucination.[182]

1906:

investigation of word-association made by Dr Jung and Dr Riklin inside Burgholzli is finished.[183]

Assoziation, Traum und Hysterische Symptom by Dr C Jung is published [184]

1905:

Dr Bleuler's Bewußtsein und Assoziation is published [184]

1904:

Bleuler begins an approximately 33 year exchange of mailed (posted) letters with Dr Freud[83]

Jung & Riklin publish: "Experimental investigations about associations of healthy people" [185]

Über die Bedeutung von Assoziationsversuchen by Dr Bleuler is published [184]

1903: investigation of word-association made by Dr Jung and Dr Riklin inside Burgholzli begins.[133]

1902:

Jung uses the idea of a complex in his thesis.[186][187]

Bleuler first reads the writings of Freud [188]

1900:

Carl Jung is a staff member at a Psychiatric Clinic in Zürich where Dr Eugen Bleuler is director[189]

The Bertillon Committee for the International Statistical Institute (ILCD-1) describes psychiatric disorders as: "85 General paralysis of insane 86 Insanity (not puerperal)" [190][24]

1899:

the first complete description of Dementia Praecox is made, published in Emil Kraepelin’s textbook [191]

a definition of Dementia Praecox with the syndromes: hebephrenic, catatonic, paranoid is made by Kraepelin in his textbook[192]

a doctor of the Indiana State Reformatory discovers the method for sterilisation: vasectomy[173]

Die Assoziationen in der Erschöpfung by Dr G. Aschaffenburg is published in Psychologische Arbeiten (Volume II) in which Dr E. Kraepelin is the editor [193]

1896: Experimentelle Studien über Associationen by Dr G. Aschaffenburg is published in Psychologische Arbeiten (Volume I) in which Dr E. Kraepelin is the editor [193][194]

1895:

Freud publishes a work which mentions "association fibers" of the brain which "serve the association of ideas"[195]

Connecticut (United States of America): (eugenics) the first law in America for which an enforcement is made that it is illegal for "epileptics, imbeciles, and the feebleminded" to marry [196][197][198]

Freud is using cocaine [199]

1894: Dr Freud is inhaling ignited tobacco smoke containing the psychoactive nicotine from about 20 cigars every day [200][201]

1893: Dr Josef Breuer of Vienna and Dr Freud explain the existence of the phenomenon of "splitting of consciousness" as "present to a rudimentary degree in all forms of hysteria".[202][203]

1892: Freud begins a method of "psychical analysis" or "concentration technique" for analysis of psychology. Dr Freud begins his use of a technique and analysis which later is known as "free association"[204][205][206]

1888: Professor (1886; chef de clinique, Hôpital de la Salpêtrière, 1885) Gilbert Ballet thinks "inner speech unfolds a life of its own" which "occasionally" persist in consciousness to an extent which is to "border on auditory hallucination" [207]

1887 JANUARY 1: Experiments on the association of ideas by James McKeen Cattell is published by the Mind Association[193][208]

1886: (eugenics) Auguste Forel is the first in Europe (as Director of Burgholzli hospital in Zürich) to sterilize someone because of a psychiatric diagnosis [209][120][189]

OCTOBER 20,1885 - FEBRUARY 28, 1886: Freud's work changes from neuropathology to psychopathology.[210][211][212] During this period Dr Freud is attending lectures provided by the neurologist professor Jean-Martin Charcot ('le pere de la neurologie' in France, the father of modern neurology), Hôpital de la Salpêtrière.[213][214][215][212][207] Dr Freud participates in the drug-use of cocaine, a psychoactive drug, during this period.[210][211][200][216][217]

1884 after APRIL 21 - before JUNE 19: Dr Freud first consumes and self administers cocaine in order to report on the history, pharmacology, effects, and possible medicinal use; published as Über Coca during July 1884.[218][51][219][220][221]

1883: Sir F Galton F.R.S publishes his use of: a word association test. Galton invents "eugenics".[222][223]

1882: Dr Arnold Pick describes the general concept krankheitsbewuẞtstein (awareness of illness), which contains specifically krankheitsgefühl (awareness of feeling ill) and kranksheitseinsicht (insight into illness). Reason and or reflection produce kranksheitseinsicht [224][225][226]

after MAY 1880 and before MAY 1881: S Freud begins his predominantly life-long habit of tobacco consumption. During 31 March 1881 Dr S Freud qualifies as a doctor of medicine. Dr Freud's father was also a consumer of the same plant the smoke of which contains the psychoactive substance nicotine and a number of toxic substances.[227][228][229][201][230][231]

1880: "dementia praecox" is first used as a description by alienist Heinrich Schüle within Illenau asylum (construction completed 1842) in Baden, Germany.[232][233][234] Schuele's concept of nosology was made in harmony with an idea of degression from health in which insanity is progressive through generation by biological inheritance, named the theory of degeneration.[235]

1879: Francis Galton first mentions in publication the "essence" of a novel idea for psychological investigation: a word association experiment[236]

1874: Kahlbaum creates the idea of catatonia[237][238]

1863:

Kahlbaum creates the idea of hebephrenia[239][240][241][242] Hebe is the translation of an ancient greek word which meant "goddess of the youth", hebe in the psychiatric sense meant "youth"[239][240][241][243]

Kahlbaum differentiates vesania typica from dysphrenia.[244][245][nb 8]

1861: positive and negative symptoms, a concept, created by the assistant physician (University College Hospital) John Russell Reynolds, in which the former include hallucinations and delusions of the paranoid type (clonic jerking and movements of a non-normal sort), (the latter: loss of sensation, paralysis and coma)[247][248][249]

1860: Morel's degeneration-theory (in Traité des maladies mentales), from Saint-Yon asylum (opened 11 July 1825), is published "1st generation: neurosis, 2nd: mental alienation, 3rd: imbecility, 4th: sterilisation". The degenerative process as from the first stage is thought caused by alcohol and, or, other toxic substances. The possible danger of the problem of degeneration is that it could develop as a “physiological and moral malaria” within a hypothetical population by defective development of circumstances as a consequence of environmental pathologicity.[250][251][252][253][254][255][256] [nb 9]

1859: Heinrich Neumann considered insanity ("Wahsinn") to be a staggered process of development in which the first manifestation is melancholia, should this persist, develops into periods of mania, the third state if continuation of insanity occurs is amentia confusion ("Verwirtheit") or paranoia ("Verrucktheit"). Within individuals with no relief from symptomatic states of the previous three stages the consequence is dementia ("Blödsinn") [nb 10] [260][261]

1852: Alienist Bénédict-Augustin Morel first describes "démence précoce" [262][263][264][253]

1841: medical examiner and physician Canstatt creates the word psychosis; in the original German language version: "Psychose". Dr. Canstatt was "königlich bayerischem Gerichtsarzte" (a royal Bavarian court physician) during 1843, during the reign of Ludwig I.[265][266][267][268][269][270][271] «Psychose» signifies psychic neurosis [272]

1835: Dr Eisenmann created the terms somatopsychrosen and psychrosen to describe orders of neurotic illness.[273][59] The fourth family of somatopsychrosen illnesses is named Dysphrenesien. The fourth family of psychorosen is named phrensie, which is described as sufferings of the intelligence ("Leiden der intelligens"). Phrensie has six groups: Aphelxia ("Zerstreutheit": absent-mindedness), Anamnesia ("Vergefslichteit": obsessiveness), Monomoria ("fixe ideen": fixed ideas), Moria ("Narrheit": folly), Lerema ("Kindischwerden": childishness), Anoëa ("Blödsinn": nonsense - nonsensicalness) [59] [nb 11]

1833: Joseph Guislain considered insanity to develop through definable states (1)manie (2)folie (3)stupidité (4)l’epilepsie (5)hallucinations (6)confusion, with the seventh and terminus state being: dementia [278]

1797: the retrospective first supposed contended obvious example of the admission to an institution of an individual with thoughts and behaviours which indicate the existence of a schizophrenia-like disorder: the case of James Tilly Matthews.[279][280]

1700: the concept of associations of ideas is used explicitly in the year of the fourth edition of Essay Concerning Human Understanding of John Locke; madness is made by associations of ideas which are not within human understanding.[281][282][283][284][285]

1652: the historian Alexander Ross, in his book about the history of the world, states Michael the Stammerer (Michael Balbus) "dyed" (during the year 829) "of a Phrensie and Strangury or as some say of a Bloudy flux" [286][287]

after circa 1640 [nb 12] and before 1651: Thomas HOBBES of Malmesbury is the first to make use of the idea of what is known by Locke as the «association of ideas» [290][281][288][291]

1602-8: Professor (University of Basel) Felix Platter determines within states of phrensie "spectra varia ex falsa imaginatione existiment". Platter determines lesion of the mind as mentis alienatio with mentis hallucinatio.[292]

c. 1533:[nb 13] scholar, university teacher (Dôle, Pavia), lawyer (Metz), physician, court astrologer, Knight, Magician Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa von Nettesheim contends that phrensie is the "soul coming from the Gods, or Demons". While "Plato defines this by alienation, and binding", phrensie is divine which proceeds from dieties.[294][295][296][297]

before 1422: an account by a monk of St Albans Thomas Walsingham in which is written of deaths in Cantebriggae during 1389 where people died (moriebantur) by invading (invasi) phrensy (phrenesi) of mind (mentis) [nb 14] ("prout dicebatur, sospites, invasi mentis phrenesi moriebantur, sine viatico sive sensu") [nb 15] [300][301]

c. 1420: the first known use of the English version word dilusioun; Siege of Thebes of John Lydgate, monk at Bury St Edmunds, within the only Middle English poem on Oedipus's sons.[302][303][304][305] [nb 16]

1368: first known use in France of the word realité [308] [nb 17]

1300's: the word frentik is understood to mean both "fooles" and "madde" in England in Piers Plowman and by Geoffrey Chaucer (esquire) respectively.[314][315][316][317][318][319][320][321]

after c. 1241: reading Aristotle’s treatises, a monk of the Order of St Dominic: Albertus (of Lauingen, born as Count von Bollstädt) uses realistic ideas instead of allegory and symbolism for synthesis of libri naturales with sapientia biblica to produce a position of thought of how to understand nature by christian contemplation as realism. [nb 18] [323][324][325][326][327][328]

c. 1200 the idea of insight exists in writing in the Ormulum, in which Canon Regular of St Augustine Orrm (christened Ormin) provides translation of the Gospels (expounds hope for salvation of the illiterate that should be made by their education in the details of christian devotion) as verse-homilies [329][330][331][332][333][334][nb 19]

c. 130 AD: Claudius Galenus Pergami (Greek: Κλαύδιος Γαληνός) recognizes the location of the phrenic nerve at the spinal cord 3rd mylotome with the diaphragm [336]

195 or 185 - 159 BCE Terentius Afer uses "deludi" a word of the ancient Latin language [337]

between c. 205-184: "earum ipsarum rerum rēapse, non oratione perfectio" (a line of Truculentes a comedical play (palliata) by T.M. Plautus); the Latin language words rerum rēapse mean the reality of things. "Phronesium" is a character.[338][339][340][341][342]

Παρανοίας γραφή (paranoías graphḗ) a legal action against insanity, as in Plato's text "Laws" (Πλάτων Νόμοι),[343][344] was a process in which someone could make complaint, usually against a father, or against anyone who is "mad or senile".[345][346][347]

399: Σωκράτης (Socrates) is condemned by a court to be expelled from Athens in relation in part to a voice he hears (τὸ δαιμόνιον - the daimonion).[348][349][350][351][352][353][354][355]

428: In an ancient Greek theatre play by ΕΥΡΙΠΙΔΗΣ (Euripides) a nurse is made to speak on the subject of a problem which relates to φρένας (phrenes)[356][357][358]

c. 18941595: Babylonian language has no word for mind.[359] The concept of the possibility of gaining topical intelligence by access of a supra-consciousness existed as known of by the medium of divination.[360]

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  325. Cerrito, A. (2018). "Botany as Science and Exegetical Tool in Albert the Great". Aisthesis. Pratiche, Linguaggi e Saperi dell'estetico. 11 (1): 97–107. doi:10.13128/Aisthesis-23275. Retrieved 28 December 2023.
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  327. Langholm, O. (9 September 2016). "Albert the Great, Saint Albertus Magnus (c.1200–1280)". The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics. London: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 1–2. doi:10.1057/978-1-349-95121-5_2029-1. ISBN 978-1-349-95121-5. Retrieved 28 December 2023.
  328. Kennedy, D (1907). Knight, Kevin (ed.). "St. Albertus Magnus". www.newadvent.org. The Catholic Encyclopedia. Retrieved 28 December 2023. In the year 1223 he joined the Order of St. Dominic, being attracted by the preaching of Blessed Jordan of Saxony second Master General of the Order.
  329. "insight" Oxford University English Dictionary
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  332. Thomas, Carla María (3 August 2017). "Ormulum". The Encyclopedia of Medieval Literature in Britain. onlinelibrary.wiley.com. pp. 1–3. doi:10.1002/9781118396957.wbemlb269. ISBN 978-1-118-39698-8.
  333. Johannesson, Nils-Lennart (January 2004). "THE ETYMOLOGY OF 'RÍME' IN THE 'ORMULUM'". Nordic Journal of English Studies. 3 (1): 11(71). doi:10.35360/njes.22. Retrieved 29 December 2023. 1. Orm names himself and his book in the Dedication to his brother Walter, who is said to have commissioned the work. Both brothers are described as Augustinian canons.
  334. Phillips, Betty S. (1992). "Open syllable lengthening and the Ormulum". WORD. 43 (3): 375–382. doi:10.1080/00437956.1992.12098314. The date at which Middle English open syllable lengthening began and the value of the evidence from the Ormulum (ca. 1200) in determining that date have been disputed...Orm's use of several nouns with etymologically short vowels in the penultimate syllable of his line of verse (which required a heavy syllable) supports the conclusion that open-syllable lengthening had begun in his dialect.
  335. The Augustinian Order of the Province of Saint Thomas of Villanova
  336. Baloyannis, Stavros J. Aik., Divoli (ed.). "The neurology in the Hellenistic era: An harmonization of the philosophy with the science". Encephalos. Retrieved 14 December 2023.
  337. Publius Terentius Afer "Andria" 1, 2, 32 In: dē-lūdo , si, sum, Charlton T. Lewis, Charles Short, A Latin Dictionary
  338. Lewis Ph.D., Charlton T.; Short, Charles (1879). Crane, G.R. (ed.). "Latin Word Study Tool". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Perseus Digital Library. Retrieved 29 December 2023. rēapse , adv. contr. from re and eapse, an old form for ipsā; hence in tmesi: reque eapse, Scip. Afr. ap. Fest. p. 286, 3; cf. ipse init., I. in fact, in reality, actually, really (an old word, which does not occur after Cic.): "reapse est re ipsā," Fest. p. 278 Müll.; Plaut. Truc. 4, 3, 41: "earum ipsarum rerum reapse, non oratione perfectio,"
  339. Karakasis, Evangelos (16 December 2013). "28 The Language of the Palliata". In Fontaine, Michael; Scafuro, Adele C. (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of Greek and Roman Comedy. University of Oxford: Oxford Academic. pp. 555–578. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199743544.013.028. Retrieved 29 December 2023.
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  341. Klar, Laura S. (October 2006). "HEILBRUNN TIMELINE OF ART HISTORY ESSAYS: Theater and Amphitheater in the Roman World". www.metmuseum.org. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 29 December 2023. In 240 B.C., full-length, scripted plays were introduced to Rome by the playwright Livius Andronicus, a native of the Greek city of Tarentum in southern Italy. The earliest Latin plays to have survived intact are the comedies of Plautus (active ca. 205–184 B.C.), which were principally adaptations of Greek New Comedy.
  342. Pappaioannou, Sophie (15 May 2020). "Chapter 6 Postclassical Comedy and the Composition of Roman Comedy". In Petrides, Antonis K. (ed.). New Perspectives on Postclassical Comedy. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 169. ISBN 9781527551589. It is widely acknowledged nowadays that the Truculentes is not a typical Plautine palliata. The acting is too self-conscious, and this persistent emphasis on realism and reality is largely responsible for the plays unorthodox plotline and content. As a result, the play clashes against the structural conventions of the New Comedy, which are founded on illusion and the reversal of reality.
  343. Thür, Gerhard (2006). "Paranoias graphe". In Cancik, Hubert; Schneider, Helmuth (eds.). Brill’s New Pauly. doi:10.1163/1574-9347_bnp_e907930. ISBN 978-90-04-12259-8.
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  347. Marke Ahonen p.88 in Mental Disorders in Ancient Philosophy Springer International Publishing 16 January 2014
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  356. Gümüş, Florentina. (2021). Love as Disease in Euripides’ Hippolytus and Tony Harrison’s Phaedra Britannica
  357. ΕΥΡΙΠΙΔΗΣ Ἱππόλυτος (published by Κέντρο Ελληνικής Γλώσσας) Translation of [6] [7]:
    τάδε μαντείας ἄξια πολλῆς,
    ὅστις σε θεῶν ἀνασειράζει
    καὶ παρακόπτει φρένας, ὦ παῖ.
    ΦΑ. δύστηνος ἐγώ, τί ποτ᾽ εἰργασάμην;
    ποῖ παρεπλάγχθην γνώμης ἀγαθῆς
    using: with:
  358. Euripides Core Vocab: phrēn, phrenes The Kosmos Society AUGUST 22, 2016
  359. Reynolds, Edward H.; Kinnier Wilson, James V. (September 2014). "Neurology and psychiatry in Babylon". Brain. 137 (9): 2611–2619. doi:10.1093/brain/awu192. PMID 25037816. Retrieved 29 December 2023. Babylonian accounts of neurological and psychiatric disorders...The concept of 'mind' was not current either, so that what is today broadly regarded as mental disorders were in large part observed as disorders of behaviour.
  360. Annus, Amar (August 2023). "Theory of Marduk's Mind in Babylonian Wisdom Literature". www.researchgate.net. Zaphon. Retrieved 29 December 2023. The following explanation of this epithet was written down in the Babylonian Creation Epic: dšà-zu mu-de-e lìb-bi ilāni šá i-bar-ru-u kar-šú "Shazu, the one who knows the heart of the gods, who examines the mind" (Lambert, 2013: 126 VII 35). The Akkadian expression used here was barû karšu "to look into a stomach," which also related to the divination through extispicy, when the inner organs of sacrificial animal were inspected to learn about deities' plans for future (Starr 1983: 54–55)...the divine authority was the sun god Shamash.

Notes

  1. Lupus est homo homini, non homo, quom qualis sit non novit
    Homo homini lupus est; viz. Wolff (see 1908) [57][58] from Eisenmann (see 1835) [59] (i.e. livestock depredation [60]): the father of Sigismund Freud (see 1911 & 1893) was at some time registered as (or primarily was) a wool merchant,[61][62][63][64] the first name of the leader of the German government, Adolf Hitler, apparently means noble wolf [65][66][67]
  2. "sin of the mixture of blood" (Hitler, Mein Kampf, 1925-6):[91][92] see 1924, 1911, 1908, 1859, 1835, 1833
  3. During 14 April a method for the splitting of an atom is discovered. An atom of lithium is made disintegrational by John Cockcroft and Ernest Walton using a particle accelerator (after Rutherford) designed to study nuclear reactions. The disintegrational products are transmutations.[94][95][96][97][98][99] see: 1948
  4. the word Blödsinn (see 1835 & 1859) means literally; (blöd): idiot, sheepish,[101][102] silly,[101] disagreeable,[103] imbecilic (old meaning),[101][103] feeble-minded (old meaning) [103][104] (sinn): senses, &, consciousness, &, mind [105]
  5. "introduced in 1904 the concept in association with schizophrenia.";[115](Triarhou 2012) "and in 1904 ‘‘intrapsychic ataxia’’...as a pathogenetic hallmark of schizophrenia" [116]
  6. For sources of first names of "Riklin" and "Abraham" see: Bibliography: Ashok; Moskowitz, respectively
  7. "coined the term schizophrenia" (i.e. "coin") is used in a number of sources [159][160][161][162][163][164][165][166][167][168][169][170][171]
  8. (Rocha, Cunha, Torres, Lopes 2021) "Initially, in 1896, Kahlbaum coined the term ‘dysphrenia’, a group of severe form of psychosis"[246]
  9. Traité des dégénérescences physiques, intellectuelles, et morales de l'espèce humaine (1857) doesn't contain any reference to stérilité or stérilisation.[257][258][259]
  10. see 1835
    • "The term psychosis was first used by Carl Canstatt, who thus distinguished functional disorders of the ‘intelligent sphere of the nervous system’ from disorders of ‘other nerve provinces’ (Canstatt, Citation1841, p. 328)" [274]
    • "Canstatt introduced the concept of psychosis into the psychiatric literature in 1841. He used the term synonymously with “psychic neurosis” and emphasized, for the first time, psychic manifestations of a brain disease (Burgy, 2008)."[275]
    • "While there has been no universal consensus on the concept of “psychosis”, since the term was introduced by Canstatt into the psychiatric literature" (Burgy M. 2008), "one of the most common uses has been to refer to phenomena such as delusions and hallucinations" (van Os J, Murray RM 2013)[276]
    • "The term 'psychosis' and its synonym 'psychic neurosis' was introduced into the psychiatric literature by the German forensic doctor Carl Canstatt in 1841 ...(Bürgy, 2008). In the 1843 edition of the handbook, Canstatt wrote..." - 'Where the ailment underlying the psychosis is recognised and removed by the doctor's action, where psychosis has not firmly struck its roots as an independent disease of the individuality, there, the causal indication fully claims its rights...Yet more often causal indications are beyond the scope of the doctor, and nothing else remains except direct combat against the psychosis' (p.368 [277]
  11. the year of the existence of The Elements of Law, Natural and Politic[288][289]
  12. the year of the existence of De occulta Philosophia Libri Tres [293]
  13. (or more literally) with an invaded mind madly died [298] (machine translation verbatim) "as it was said, the suspects, attacked by a frenzy of mind, died without rest or sense" [299]
  14. italics are added here i.e. are not in the original
  15. although search return "delude" in University Rochester returns an earlier text: John Gower (who died 1408) "... desire to know buried Then delude contrived their ..." Confessio Amantis: Book 7 [306][307] with view and twice review of the complete text no such passage or word or variation of is visible. Quotes proceeding elucidate "deceipte" by "flaterie" so "fallas aperceiveth", that: "Of feigned wordes make him wene That blak is whyt and blew is grene":
    line 1545:In ston and gras vertu ther is, Bot yit the bokes tellen this,That word above alle erthli thinges Is vertuous in his doinges,Wher so it be to evele or goode.For if the wordes semen goode And ben wel spoke at mannes ere,Whan that ther is no trouthe there,Thei don fulofte gret deceipte;For whan the word to the conceipte Descordeth in so double a wise, Such Rethorique is to despise In every place, and for to drede. 2168: The covoitouse flaterie, Which many a worthi king deceiveth, Er he the fallas aperceiveth Of hem that serven to the glose. 2177: A Philosophre, as thou schalt hiere, Spak to a king of this matiere, And seide him wel hou that flatours Coupable were of thre errours. 2185: Toward the king another was, Whan thei be sleihte and be fallas Of feigned wordes make him wene That blak is whyt and blew is grene Touchende of his condicion. 2651: "I schal," quod he, "deceive and lye With flaterende prophecie In suche mouthes as he lieveth." And He which alle thing achieveth Bad him go forth and don riht so. And over this I sih also The noble peple of Irahel Dispers as schep upon an hell, Withoute a kepere unarraied;
  16. schizophrenia is loss of contact with reality [309][310][311][312][313]
  17. "Category «reality»...originates from the «Metaphysics» of Aristotle, which later developed into the category of German philosophy Wirklichkeit" [322]
  18. The Order of St. Augustine began 1244 [335]

Bibliography

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