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The psychiatrist as philosopher
pp. 143-155
Abstract
In the Summer of 1965, some months after I first met Erwin Straus and his confidant and collaborator, the late Richard Griffith, I was privileged to participate and work in their research setting in Lexington, Kentucky, a city now celebrated as the home of the Lexington Conferences on Pure and Applied Phenomenology, the fifth of which convened in 1972.2 On the occasion of my visit I began my own compilation and personal study of Professor Straus' complete writings,3 beginning with "Zur Pathogenese des chronischen Morphinismus' [10], his inaugural dissertation, published in 1919 upon attaining his doctorate in medicine at the Friedrich Wilhelms University in Berlin.
Publication details
Published in:
Engelhardt Tristram, Spicker Stuart (1978) Mental health: philosophical perspectives: proceedings of the fourth trans-disciplinary symposium on philosophy and medicine. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 143-155
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-015-6909-5_10
Full citation:
Spicker Stuart (1978) „The psychiatrist as philosopher“, In: T. Engelhardt & Spicker (eds.), Mental health: philosophical perspectives, Dordrecht, Springer, 143–155.