The American Journal of Insanity, Volúmenes38-39Utica State Hospital Press, 1882 |
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Página 4
... expressed myself on any subject under discussion , and feeling perfectly confident that the highest recommendation to your polite attention , is your reliance on the sincerity of the speaker , I dismiss from my mind every apprehension ...
... expressed myself on any subject under discussion , and feeling perfectly confident that the highest recommendation to your polite attention , is your reliance on the sincerity of the speaker , I dismiss from my mind every apprehension ...
Página 15
... expression to my conjectures as to the reason of our government for making the change . I must , however , declare my belief that it has been a very unwise one , and a step in a retrograde direction , equally injudicious as regards the ...
... expression to my conjectures as to the reason of our government for making the change . I must , however , declare my belief that it has been a very unwise one , and a step in a retrograde direction , equally injudicious as regards the ...
Página 20
... expression . The mental states of this disease vary widely . Some patients are ecstatic , joyous , happy , complacent , rich , powerful ; others are depressed , anxious , irritable , moody , and unhappy . One patient is quiet but fully ...
... expression . The mental states of this disease vary widely . Some patients are ecstatic , joyous , happy , complacent , rich , powerful ; others are depressed , anxious , irritable , moody , and unhappy . One patient is quiet but fully ...
Página 22
... expression displayed the change characteristic of the disease ; his handwriting became ataxic ; in short , general paresis was developed . Here , the disease was undoubtedly due to continuous over - stimulation , as no traces of mental ...
... expression displayed the change characteristic of the disease ; his handwriting became ataxic ; in short , general paresis was developed . Here , the disease was undoubtedly due to continuous over - stimulation , as no traces of mental ...
Página 35
... expression , and trembling from head to foot , can not be induced to speak , and is heed- less of the calls of nature . In the majority of cases the musculature is tense and rigid ; the patient vehe- mently opposes every attempted ...
... expression , and trembling from head to foot , can not be induced to speak , and is heed- less of the calls of nature . In the majority of cases the musculature is tense and rigid ; the patient vehe- mently opposes every attempted ...
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Términos y frases comunes
admitted affected alienists AMERICAN JOURNAL Annual Report appear appointed asked Association attacks attention believe brain Butler Hospital called cerebral cerebral hæmorrhage character chronic Commissioner in Lunacy Commissioners committed committee condition connection court crime delusion dementia Discharged recovered Doctor dura mater duty epilepsy epileptic especially evidence examination excitement existence experience fact friends Guiteau Gundry Hospital hypothetical question idea insane delusion insane persons inspiration institution intellectual JOURNAL OF INSANITY jury justice Lunacy Lunatic Asylum mania matter medical superintendent melancholia ment mental disease mind moral insanity morbid nature never observed Oneida Community opinion paper paresis patients Pennsylvania Hospital period physician pia mater present President prisoner provision reason referred regard restraint result sane sanity society subarachnoid space symptoms testified tion treatment trial Unimproved Utica Ward's Island wards Whole number witness York
Pasajes populares
Página 98 - And it came to pass at the seventh time, that he said, Behold, there ariseth a little cloud out of the sea like a man's hand.
Página 187 - So live, that when thy summons comes to join The innumerable caravan that moves To that mysterious realm where each shall take His chamber in the silent halls of death, Thou go not like the quarry-slave at night, Scourged to his dungeon, but, sustained and soothed By an unfaltering trust, approach thy grave Like one who wraps the drapery of his couch About him, and lies down to pleasant dreams.
Página 458 - ... it is not every kind of frantic humour or something unaccountable in a man's actions, that points him out to be such a madman as is to be exempted from punishment: it must be a man that is totally deprived of his understanding and memory, and doth not know what he is doing, no more than an infant, than a brute, or a wild beast...
Página 460 - No act is a crime if the person who does it is, at the time when it is done, prevented, either by defective mental power, or by any disease affecting his mind...
Página 44 - The idiom of nomads," as Grimm says, "contains an abundant wealth of manifold expressions for sword and weapons, and for the different stages in * Marsh, Lectures, p. 133, 368. the life of their cattle. In a more highly cultivated language these expressions become burthensome and superfluous. But, in a peasant's mouth, the bearing, calving, falling, and killing of almost every animal has its own peculiar term, as the sportsman delights in calling the gait and members of game by different names. The...
Página 56 - I swear the earth shall surely be complete to him or her who shall be complete, The earth remains jagged and broken only to him or her who remains jagged and broken.
Página 149 - At each annual meeting the president shall appoint a committee of five whose duty it shall be to report at the next annual meeting subjects for investigation and discussion, and if the subjects are approved by the Association, the president shall appoint special committees to report on them.
Página 66 - I conceived the idea of removing the President four weeks ago; I conceived the idea myself, and kept it to myself," and other words of like character. That he subsequently claimed that he was inspired by the Deity to kill the President, and that he had had previous inspirations ; that, for years before the shooting, he had procured a precarious living, not paying his board...
Página 335 - ... relieved by the performance of a great duty; also that there was no other adequate motive for the act than the conviction that he was executing the Divine will for the good of his country. Assuming all...
Página 335 - States; also that he acted on what he believed to be such inspiration, and as he believed to be in accordance with the Divine will in the preparation for, and in the accomplishment of, such a purpose; also that he committed the act of shooting the President under what he believed to be a Divine command which he was not at liberty to disobey, and which belief made out a conviction which controlled his conscience and overpowered his will as to that act, so that he could not resist the mental pressure...