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Clinical Studies in Pathological Dreaming
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 February 2018
Extract
In the year 1896 I directed the attention of my fellow specialists, in the course of details of observations relating to two women, to the subject of pathological dreaming, till now only slightly investigated, and showed how intense hysterical dreaming states had been developed from previous reveries. The literature which has appeared since then contains but few references to this matter.
- Type
- Part I.—Original Articles
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1901
References
(1) Jahrb. f. Psych, u. Neural., xiv, p. 280.Google Scholar
(2) “Auto-erotism in Alienist and Neurologist,” April, 1898, reprinted in the author's Studies in the Psychology of Sex.Google Scholar
(3) Nevroseset Idées fixes, 1898, p. 390. I have been unable to obtain access to a work of Partridge in Pedagog. Sem., 1898, v, p. 445, but it is evidently not concerned with the psycho-pathological aspect of reverie.Google Scholar
(4) Arch.f. Psych. Bd. xxxii, 1899, p. 374.Google Scholar
(5) Since the above was written I have been able, by the kindness of the author, to procure the paper of Dr. R. H. Chase on “The Imagination in Relation to Mental Diseases,” Amer. Journ. of Insan., vol. Ivi, p. 285. As he does not enter into the clinical phenomena of day-dreaming, it is sufficient simply to refer to this paper here. From a reference quoted by him I conclude that Ray has also gone into this question.Google Scholar
(6) Die pathologische Lüge und die psychisch abnormen Schwindler, Stuttgart, 1891.Google Scholar
(7) In my first work (loe. cit., p. 301) I have already directed attention to the difference between reverie and the fanciful lying of hysterical or degenerate individuals.Google Scholar
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