Torsten Ehrlich |
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Dipl.-Psych. (MA)
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Universität Trier
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Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy
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Education
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Jan 2007
Institute for Psychological Therapy (CBT)
Clinical TrainingGermany · Leipzig -
Oct 2001–
Sep 2006University of Leipzig
Clinical Psychology, Medicine · Dipl.-Psych. (MA)Germany · Leipzig
Other
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LanguagesGerman, English, French & Russian (slightly)
Questions and Answers (20) View all
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Answer added in Clinical Psychology23 a questionBy Hassan Bashirir ·Torsten Ehrlich · Universität TrierI looked it up the other day in my old notebooks from my psychiatry classes. It seems that the word psychosis was first introduced in 1845 by Austrian... [more]I looked it up the other day in my old notebooks from my psychiatry classes. It seems that the word psychosis was first introduced in 1845 by Austrian physician Ernst von Feuchtersleben. You can have a look at his "Lehrbuch der ärztlichen Seelenkunde" (Textbook of medical soul science") on googlebooks. http://books.google.com/books/about/Lehrbuch_der_ärztlichen_Seelenkunde.html?id=aWD8zzeLvCUCFollowing
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Answer added in Clinical Psychology23 a questionBy Hassan Bashirir ·Torsten Ehrlich · Universität TrierActually, the psychosis vs. neurosis discrimination dates back from the early pioneering days of psychiatry. Generally, psychosis was used to addresse... [more]Actually, the psychosis vs. neurosis discrimination dates back from the early pioneering days of psychiatry. Generally, psychosis was used to addressed any mental disorder that was meant to be resulting from physical dysfunction whereas neurosis was a disorder that came resulted from mental and emotional dysfunction. After all, there are certain psychoses like schizophrenia, manic depression etc. Nowadays, psychosis is more or less a synonym for schizophrenia.Following