精神病学历史词典

W. Jackson
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引用次数: 17

摘要

我要坦白一件事(嗯,两件)。我喜欢看字典,我喜欢读历史。因此,这篇评论的任何客观主张从此都将被放弃,我将非常高兴地与你分享,为什么我一直在翻阅肖特博士的这本小书,为什么它花了6个月的时间在我的桌面、床边和电脑桌上循环,而不是在办公室图书馆的同类书中找到一个位置。多伦多大学医学史教授爱德华·肖特(Edward Shorter)对精神病学的发展特别感兴趣。在对词典的简要介绍中,他概述了现代精神病学实践的三个大阶段:精神病院时期(1770-1870),精神分析时期(1870-1970)和药理学时期(1970年至今)。肖特认为,我们当前的时代是精神疾病生物学观点的复兴时期,在这个时代,典型的精神病院时期的疾病生物医学模型通过分子和基因研究获得了新的立脚点,这些研究导致了有效的药物治疗。词典按照习惯的字母顺序排列,有各种各样的词条,包括人物、疾病、药物、思想流派和学校本身(包括医院)。对每个条目的描述从半页到几页不等,通常是简洁的散文。例如,忧郁症一词被解释为起源于古典希腊医生。接下来,引用了蒂莫西·布莱特、约翰·哈斯拉姆、菲利普·皮内尔和威廉·卡伦的早期语录,展示了这个词在后来的用法中是如何变化的。罗伯特·伯顿的《忧郁剖析》(1621)被广泛引用。该术语的使用下降是值得注意的,以及它的恢复由卡尔·莱昂哈德和其随后列入DSM系统。这些条目足以刺激感兴趣的学习者,他们可以用思路、单词起源和概念分类学来玩“串连点”的游戏。但是谁会读字典呢?其实我。还有医科学生,精神病学住院医师,想要了解更多精神病学知识的通才,以及了解医学史全景的学生。桌面、床边、电脑桌——找一个地方放肖特的历史词典,它会在那里待上一段时间。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Historical Dictionary of Psychiatry
I've a confession (well, two). I've a weakness for dictionaries, and I love to read history. So any claim to objectivity in this review is henceforth renounced, and I shall be perfectly happy to share with you why I keep turning back to Dr. Shorter's little book and why it has spent 6 months circulating on my desktop, bedside, and computer table rather than finding a place among its peers in the office library. Edward Shorter, a professor of the history of medicine at the University of Toronto, has a particular interest in the development of psychiatry. In the brief introduction to the dictionary, he outlines 3 broad phases of modern psychiatric practice: the asylum period (1770–1870), the psychoanalytic period (1870–1970), and the pharmacologic period (1970–present). Shorter sees our current era as the renaissance of the biological view of psychiatric illness, in which the biomedical models of illness that typified the asylum period have gained a new footing via molecular and genetic studies that have led to effective pharmacologic treatments. The dictionary is arranged in customary alphabetical fashion, with a variety of entries, including persons, diseases, medications, schools of thought, and schools proper (including hospitals used as such). The descriptions given to each entry range from a half page to several pages and are generally in succinct prose. For instance, the term melancholia is explained to have originated with classical Greek physicians. Next, early quotations from Timothy Bright, John Haslam, Phillippe Pinel, and William Cullen are cited, showing how the term changed in later usage. Robert Burton's The Anatomy of Melancholy (1621) is quoted extensively. The term's decline in usage is noted, as well as its rehabilitation by Karl Leonhard and its subsequent inclusion in the DSM system. The entries give just enough to titillate the interested learner, who can go for lengths of playing “connect-the-dots” with trains of thought, word origins, and conceptual nosology. But who reads dictionaries? Well—me. And medical students, psychiatry residents, generalists who want to know more about psychiatry, and students of the panorama that is the history of medicine. Desktop, bedside, computer table—find a place for Shorter's historical dictionary, and it will stay there for some time to come.
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