Journal article

Between Theory and Interpretation of the Hereditary Transmission Process of Mental Disease. The Introduction of Mendelism in German and North American Psychiatry, 1911-1930


Authors listCottebrune, Anne

Publication year2009

Pages35-54

JournalNTM Journal of the History of Science, Technology and Medicine

Volume number17

Issue number1

ISSN0036-6978

eISSN1420-9144

Open access statusBronze

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1007/s00048-008-0325-y

PublisherSpringer


Abstract
1911 saw the beginning of decisive developments in psychiatric genetic research. During that year, two expert papers dealing with the application of the Mendelian Theory were published in Germany and in the United States. only a decade after the "rediscovery" of the Mendelian Laws simultaneous efforts were being made to better understand the hereditary transmission process of mental diseases by means of the Mendelian Theory. The results of these efforts were disparate. While in the United States, the Mendelian theory was used to support the polymorphous theory of the hereditary transmission process of mental diseases, by which a common hereditary origin of mental diseases was assumed, the introduction of Mendelism in psychiatry in Germany focused on corroborating Emil Kraepelin's concept of a disease entity. The Mendelian Theory especially helps to underpin the idea of a specific genetic origin of the clinical diseases described by Kraepelin. As German and North American psychiatric genetics were inspired by diverse disease and genetic concepts, so too was their use of the Mendelian Theory very divergent. Research linked to the use of the Mendelian Theory was both dissimilar and hotly contested. This was due to the fact that it was difficult, if not impossible to identify Mendelian patterns by studying the hereditary transmission process. As a result, the approach of studying the genetic basis of mental diseases was further developed in Germany.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleCottebrune, A. (2009) Between Theory and Interpretation of the Hereditary Transmission Process of Mental Disease. The Introduction of Mendelism in German and North American Psychiatry, 1911-1930, NTM Journal of the History of Science, Technology and Medicine, 17(1), pp. 35-54. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00048-008-0325-y

APA Citation styleCottebrune, A. (2009). Between Theory and Interpretation of the Hereditary Transmission Process of Mental Disease. The Introduction of Mendelism in German and North American Psychiatry, 1911-1930. NTM Journal of the History of Science, Technology and Medicine. 17(1), 35-54. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00048-008-0325-y



Keywords


Aaron J. RosanoffCHANCESErnst RudinEUGENICSFAMILY RESEARCHGRANDNEPHEWSGRANDNIECESmendelismNEPHEWSpolymorphismous theoryPROGNOSIS DETERMINATIONpsychiatric geneticsSCHIZOPHRENICS

Last updated on 2025-30-09 at 11:14