SFPI&S Institutional Archive

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

SFPI&S Institutional Archive http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c81260b8 No online items SFPI&S Institutional Archive SFCP.MSS.002 Finding aid prepared by Greg Borman, Eric Rosen, Shawn Riney, and Jackie Jay San Francisco Center for Psychoanalysis 444 Natoma St. San Francisco, California, 94103 (415) 563-4477 [email protected] May 2015 SFPI&S Institutional Archive SFCP.MSS.002 1 SFCP.MSS.002 Title: SFPI&S Institutional Archive Identifier/Call Number: SFCP.MSS.002 Contributing Institution: San Francisco Center for Psychoanalysis Language of Material: English Physical Description: 4.2 Linear feet11 cartons Date (inclusive): 1918-2010 Abstract: The SFPI&S Institutional Archive contains significant materials relating to both individuals associated with the institution and the institution's history. The materials span the years 1918-2007. Language of materials: English, German. creator: Benjamin, John creator: Benveniste, Daniel creator: Berliner, Bernhard, 1885-1976 creator: Bernfeld, Siegfried, 1892-1953 creator: Bettelheim, Bruno creator: Bibring, Grete L. , (Grete Lehner), 1899-1977 creator: Biernoff, Joseph creator: Brunswick, David creator: Chiado, Jenny creator: Dosuzkov, B. creator: Engle, Bernice creator: Erikson, Erik H. , (Erik Homburger), 1902-1994 creator: Freud, Anna, 1895-1982 creator: Fuchs, Herta creator: Futterman, Samuel creator: Hoffer, Willi creator: Jawetz, Ilse creator: Kasanin, J. S., (Jacob S.), 1897-1946 creator: Knight, Robert P. , (Robert Palmer), 1902-1966 creator: Loewald, Hans W., 1906-1993 creator: Maenchen, Anna, 1902-1991 creator: Meyer, Bernard C. creator: Mirviss, Sophia creator: Orr, Douglas creator: Reider, Norm creator: Ross, Helen creator: Simmel, Ernst, 1882-1947 creator: Socarides, Charles W., 1922-2005 creator: Steinberg, Stanley creator: Sylvester, Emmy creator: Trilling, Lionel, 1905-1975 creator: Zanetti, Mariane Conditions governing access For use by researchers and students of psychoanalysis subject to archive rules and regulations. Conditions governing use Subject to copyright restrictions. Preferred citation 'The San Francisco Center for Psychoanalysis Archives' Record Unit/Accession # and/or Collection Title. Historical note SFPI&S Institutional Archive SFCP.MSS.002 2 SFCP.MSS.002 The San Francisco Psychoanalytic Institute & Society was founded in 1942 in San Francisco by Emigre analysts from Austria, Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and other German-speaking countries. They founded a psychoanalytic institute in San Francisco, California similar to those that existed in Europe in the pre WW-II period. During the period that the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Institute & Society existed, which was until the organization was reorganized in the mid-1990's into the San Francisco Center for Psychoanalysis, it served as a training institute for classical Freudian psychoanalysis, with a full post-doctoral (or, earlier, post-MD) program. Meetings and classes were held at Mt. Zion Hospital until the construction of a building to house the society in 1962, located at 2380 Sutter Street. SFPI&S was disbanded when discussions among the management of the institute decided that a new organization was needed to meet the needs of a new century. These archival artifacts represent the earlier institution. Scope and contents This collection contains numerous documents relevant to SFPI&S history. Materials within this collection include correspondence, photographs, manuscripts, expense records, news clippings, oral histories, and other documents detailing both the institution's history and significant figures associated with it. Individuals with materials in this collection include Anna Freud, Erik Erikson, Emmanuel Windholz, Siegfried Bernfeld, Jacob Kasanin, and Bruno Bettelheim. Relating to the institution's history, there are brochures, ledgers, committee minutes, rundbriefes (newsletters) describing international psychoanalytic activities, and documents detailing the history of psychoanalysis in San Francisco. Arrangement note This collection is in its original order. Subjects and Indexing Terms Correspondence Photographs Psychoanalysis Psychoanalysis -- History Box 1 SFCP.MSS.002 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 1, Folder 1 D-Bernhard Berliner 1 SFPI&S.001 1930s - 1970s Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 1, Folder 2 D-Bernhard Berliner 2 SFPI&S.002 1930s-1991 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 1, Folder 3 D-Siegfried Bernfeld paper SFPI&S.003 1940s Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 1, Folder 4 D-Siegfried Bernfeld memorial lecture SFPI&S.004 1953-1960 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 1, Folder 5 D-Siegfried Bernfeld photo SFPI&S.005 1963-1963 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 1, Folder 6 D-Bruno Bettelheim SFPI&S.006 1960s Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 1, Folder 7 D-John Benjamin SFPI&S.007 1964-1964 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 1, Folder 8 D-Grete Bibring SFPI&S.008 1960s Physical Description: 1.0 Folder SFPI&S Institutional Archive SFCP.MSS.002 3 SFCP.MSS.002 Box 1, Folder 9 D-Joseph Biernoff SFPI&S.009 1969-1969 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 1, Folder 10 David Brunswick SFPI&S.010 1940-1949 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 1, Folder 11 D-Bernice Engle SFPI&S.011 1957-1964 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 1, Folder 12 D-Erikson, E. - articles about Erikson SFPI&S.012 1960s-1980s Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 1, Folder 13 D-Anna Freud photos in San Francisco SFPI&S.013 1959-1978 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 1, Folder 14 D-Anna Freud-San Francisco visit-1959 SFPI&S.014 1959-1959 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 1, Folder 15 Samuel Futterman SFPI&S.015 1942-1942 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 1, Folder 16 D-Willi Hoffer SFPI&S.016 1969-1969 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 1, Folder 17 D-Ilse Jawetz SFPI&S.017 1968-1968 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Folder 1, Robert Knight SFPI&S.018 1966-1966 Folder 18 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 1, Folder 19 D-Hans Loewald SFPI&S.019 1960s Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 1, Folder 20 D-Anna Maenchen lectures SFPI&S.020 1948-1966 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 2 Box 2, Folder 1 D-Bernard Meyer SFPI&S.021 1969-1969 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 2, Folder 2 Norm Reider articles SFPI&S.022 1948-1976 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 2, Folder 3 D-Helen Ross SFPI&S.023 1958-1958 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 2, Folder 4 D-Lionel Trilling SFPI&S.024 1950s Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 2, Folder 5 D-SFPI 20th Anniversary SFPI&S.025 1962-1962 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 2, Folder 6 D-History of Psychoanalysis in SF 1 SFPI&S.026 1957-1957 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder SFPI&S Institutional Archive SFCP.MSS.002 4 SFCP.MSS.002 Box 2, Folder 7 D-History of Psychoanalysis in SF 2 SFPI&S.027 1941-1986 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 2, Folder 8 Topeka 1938-41 SFPI&S.028 1938-1941 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 2, Folder 9 Minutes-SFPI 1941-1942 SFPI&S.029 1941-1943 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 2, Folder 10 Minutes-SFPI 1944 SFPI&S.030 1944-1944 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 2, Folder 11 Minutes-SFPI 1945 SFPI&S.031 1945-1945 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 2, Folder 12 Minutes-SFPI 1946 1 SFPI&S.032 1946-1946 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 3 Box 3, Folder 1 Minutes-SFPI 1946 2 SFPI&S.033 1940s Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 3, Folder 2 Officers of the SFPI 1947-74 SFPI&S.034 1947-1974 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 3, Folder 3 SFPI Business 1953 SFPI&S.035 1953-1953 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 3, Folder 4 SFPI Business 1954 SFPI&S.036 1954-1955 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 3, Folder 5 SFPI Business 1955 SFPI&S.037 1955-1955 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 3, Folder 6 SFPI Business 1956 SFPI&S.038 1956-1956 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 3, Folder 7 SFPI Business 1957 SFPI&S.039 1957-1957 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 3, Folder 8 SFPI Business 1959 SFPI&S.040 1959-1959 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 3, Folder 9 SFPI Business 1960 SFPI&S.041 1960-1960 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 3, Folder 10 SFPI Business SFPI&S.042 1951-1978 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 3, Folder 11 Scientific Papers 1942-1967 SFPI&S.043 1942-1967 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder SFPI&S Institutional Archive SFCP.MSS.002 5 SFCP.MSS.002 Box 3, Folder 12 D-Candidates-Information-1957 SFPI&S.044 1957-1957 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 3, Folder 13 D-SFPI-Extension Division SFPI&S.045 1958-1980 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 3, Folder 14 D-Candidates Bulletin 1965 SFPI&S.046 1965-1965 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 3, Folder 15 Policy and Controversy 1964 SFPI&S.047 1964-1964 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 3, Folder 16 D-SFPI-Lecture Ex. Div. SFPI&S.048 1943-1971 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 4 Box 4, Folder 1 D-Anna Freud Foundation SFPI&S.051 1956-1966 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 4, Folder 2 L-Anna Freud and paper by Herta Fuchs SFPI&S.052 1933-1933 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 4, Folder 3 D-Bylaws-Duplicates SFPI&S.053 1942-1973 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 4, Folder 4 APA SFPI&S.054 1942-1962 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 4, Folder 5 D-American Psychoanalytic Assoc. SFPI&S.055 1950-1980 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 4, Folder 6 Sigmund Freud & letter writing SFPI&S.056 1966-1967 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 4, Folder 7 P-The new era SFPI&S.057 1946-1946 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 4, Folder 8 Library-Leonardo da Vinci SFPI&S.058 1967-1967 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 5 Box 5, Folder 1 SFPI&S Brochures SFPI&S.059 1961-1971 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 5, Folder 2 Ledgers SFPI&S.060 1946-1948 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 5, Folder 3 Ledger 2 SFPI&S.061 1942-1961 Physical Description: 1.0 Folder Box 5, Folder 4 D-SFPI-Ledgers-1942-61 SFPI&S.062 n.d.
Recommended publications
  • German Jews in the United States: a Guide to Archival Collections
    GERMAN HISTORICAL INSTITUTE,WASHINGTON,DC REFERENCE GUIDE 24 GERMAN JEWS IN THE UNITED STATES: AGUIDE TO ARCHIVAL COLLECTIONS Contents INTRODUCTION &ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 1 ABOUT THE EDITOR 6 ARCHIVAL COLLECTIONS (arranged alphabetically by state and then city) ALABAMA Montgomery 1. Alabama Department of Archives and History ................................ 7 ARIZONA Phoenix 2. Arizona Jewish Historical Society ........................................................ 8 ARKANSAS Little Rock 3. Arkansas History Commission and State Archives .......................... 9 CALIFORNIA Berkeley 4. University of California, Berkeley: Bancroft Library, Archives .................................................................................................. 10 5. Judah L. Mages Museum: Western Jewish History Center ........... 14 Beverly Hills 6. Acad. of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences: Margaret Herrick Library, Special Coll. ............................................................................ 16 Davis 7. University of California at Davis: Shields Library, Special Collections and Archives ..................................................................... 16 Long Beach 8. California State Library, Long Beach: Special Collections ............. 17 Los Angeles 9. John F. Kennedy Memorial Library: Special Collections ...............18 10. UCLA Film and Television Archive .................................................. 18 11. USC: Doheny Memorial Library, Lion Feuchtwanger Archive ...................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Enzo Joseph Bonaventura's La Psicoanalisi: the Importance of His
    Enzo Joseph Bonaventura’s La psicoanalisi: * The importance of his thinking, history of a repression David Meghnagi** Abstract. Enzo Joseph Bonaventura (1891-1948) was one of the most authoritative figures of experimental psychology in Italy between the two World Wars. Bonaventura was also a pioneer of the Italian Psychoanalysis, to which he dedicated the exhaustive handbook titled La psicoanalisi. The aim of this paper is to review La psicoanalisi in order to reconstruct a painful historical period that has been mostly forgotten. Born in Pisa to a Jewish family, in 1913, Bonaventura graduated from Florence University with a degree in philosophy. His supervising professor, Francesco De Sarlo, hired him as an assistant in the University Laboratory of Psychology. Bonaventura was a polyhedral figure with interests spanning across many fields such as philosophy, theology, developmental psychology, psychology of motivation and education. He was also a charismatic figure in the Italian Zionist movement. Expelled from the University of Florence because of the Italian “Racial Laws”, he moved to Jerusalem where he played an important role in the development of academic psychology research in Israel. He died tragically on the 13th of April, in an ambush to the convoy of medical staff by the Hadassah. Keywords: Anti-Semitism; Hebrew University of Jerusalem; History of Psychoanalysis; Father Agostino Gemelli; Silvano Arieti; Francesco De Sarlo; Cesare Musatti. «It seemed to us that in order to more fairly assess what is truly original and profound in psychoanalysis, it would be best to [...] place it within the vast framework of contemporary psychology […]” (Enzo Bonaventura, La psicoanalisi [1938; reprint: 2016], p.
    [Show full text]
  • The Early History of Psychoanalysis in San Francisco
    Benveniste, D. (2006) The Early History of Psychoanalysis in San Francisco. Psychoanalysis and History. 8(2) July 2006. The Early History of Psychoanalysis in San Francisco Daniel Benveniste, Ph.D. Caracas, Venezuela The early history of psychoanalysis in San Francisco formally begins with the opening of Alfred Kroeber’s psychoanalytic office in 1918 and ends with the death of Siegfried Bernfeld in 1953. Between those years, San Francisco witnessed a small group of Americans and European émigrés coming together and creating the foundation of psychoanalysis in San Francisco. The issues dominating the day were those of lay analysis, psychoanalytic training models and World War II. Within this small psychoanalytic community, there were a number of extremely creative analysts who, along with the rest, participated in some rare moments in which a creative and ecumenical spirit prevailed and others in which divisiveness limited them. Without a historical context, those of us in the depth psychologies tend to become arrogant and assert the ahistorical and timeless truth of our views. We fall victim to "the narcissism of minor differences" and project our dreaded other onto the various others around us whether they be pop psychology innovators, old guard upholders of the dogma, or just our theoretical cousins. But psychoanalysis is not a natural science. It is a historical science. Nathan Adler used to say, "Every generation must rediscover psychoanalysis for itself." And I would add that we must contextualize our discoveries and re-discoveries in the social, historical and economic moment in which we are situated. There are many reasons for recalling the early history of the depth psychologies in San Francisco.
    [Show full text]
  • The Institute for Radium Research in Red Vienna
    Trafficking Materials and Maria Rentetzi Gendered Experimental Practices Chapter 4 The Institute for Radium Research in Red Vienna As this work has now been organized after several years of tentative efforts each collaborator has his or her [emphasis mine] particular share to take in making the practical preparations necessary for an experiment. Besides each has his or her particular theme for research which he pursues and where he can count on the help from one or more of his fellow workers. Such help is freely given certain workers having spent months preparing the means required for another workers theme.1 When Hans Pettersson submitted this description of the work at the Radium 1 Institute in a report to the International Education Board in April 1928, several women physicists were already part of his research team on artificial disintegration. A number of other women explored radiophysics and radiochemistry as collaborators of the institute, formed their own research groups, and worked alongside some of the best-known male physicists in the field. More specifically, between 1919 and 1934, more than one-third of the institute's personnel were women. They were not technicians or members of the laboratory support stuff but experienced researchers or practicum students who published at the same rate as their male counterparts. Marelene Rayner-Canham and Geoffrey Rayner-Canham have already drawn our 2 attention to the fact that women clustered in radioactivity research in the early twentieth century. Identifying three different European research schools on radioactivity—the French, English, and Austro-German—the Rayner-Canhams argue that women "seemed to play a disproportionately large share in the research work in radioactivity compared to many other fields of physical science."2 Through prosopographical studies of important women in these three locations, the authors address the puzzle of why so many women were attracted to this particular field.
    [Show full text]
  • Psychoanalysis in Israel: New Beginnings, Old Trajectories Eran J
    © 2015, Seismo Press AG. This work is licensed under the „Creative Commons Attribution – NonCommercial – NoDerivatives 4.0 International“ License. Psychoanalysis in Israel: New Beginnings, Old Trajectories Eran J. Rolnik (Tel-Aviv) Abstract: The arrival of psychoanalysis in pre-state Israel in the early 20th century presents a unique chapter in the history of psychoanalysis. The paper explores the encounter between psychoanalytic expertise, Judaism, Modern Hebrew culture and the Zionist revolution. It offers a look at the relationship between psy- choanalysis and a wider community, and follows the life and work of Jewish psychoanalysts during World War II. The coming of psychoanalysis to pre-state Israel, where it rapidly penetrated the discourse of pedagogy, literature, medicine, and politics, becoming a popular therapeutic to establish its identity in the face of its manifold European pasts and discipline, is regarded as an integral part of a Jewish immigrant society’s struggle with its conflict-ridden Middle Eastern present. Keywords: psychoanalysis, Zionism, Eitingon, kibbuz, immigration, Freud, Arab- Israeli conflict, Third Reich Few chapters in the historiography of psychoanalysis are as densely packed with trans-cultural, ideological, institutional and moral issues as the coming of psychoanalysis to Jewish Palestine – a geopolitical space which bears some of the deepest scars of twentieth-century European, and in particular German, history. The present essay aims at identifying different levels of reception of psychoanalysis before, during, and after the migration of German-speaking Freudians to Mandate Palestine. During this period, the reception of psychoanalysis was anything but straightforward. It thus resembled the heteronomic reception in other parts of the world.
    [Show full text]
  • The University of Chicago Experimental Futures And
    THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO EXPERIMENTAL FUTURES AND IMPOSSIBLE PROFESSIONS: PSYCHOANALYSIS, EDUCATION, AND POLITICS IN INTERWAR VIENNA, 1918-1938 A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE FACULTY OF THE DIVISION OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCES IN CANDIDACY FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY BY PHILLIP J. HENRY CHICAGO, ILLINOIS AUGUST 2018 TABLE OF CONTENTS DISSERTATION ABSTRACT v ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS x INTRODUCTION 1 Red Vienna 6 Interwar Psychoanalysis 20 Psychoanalysis, Education, and Politics in Interwar Vienna 35 CHAPTER ONE Between Seduction and Sublimation: The Emergence of a Psychoanalytic Theory of Education, 1896-1914 44 Unstable Foundations 45 Verführung and its Vicissitudes 50 Erziehung zur Realität 65 The Possibilities for Prophylaxis and the Elusiveness of Sublimation 78 Psychoanalysis and the New Education 91 CHAPTER TWO Recasting Bourgeois Psychoanalysis: Education, Authority, and the Politics of Analytic Therapy in the Freudian Revision of 1918 99 Out of the Wilderness, Into the Wasteland 104 Suggestion and its Discontents 110 Forming a Class Body for Psychoanalysis 119 The Ways and Means of Psychoanalysis 123 Beyond the Classical Paradigm 135 ii CHAPTER THREE Fashioning a New Psychoanalysis: Exceptional States and the Crisis of Authority in Analytic Practice, 1919-1925 139 States of Exception 146 Analysis for the Masses 157 Ego Politics and the Pedagogy of Reconstruction 167 Psychoanalytisches Neuland 177 The Limits of Analytic Therapy 184 CHAPTER FOUR The Mass Psychology of Education: Freudian Experiments in Collective
    [Show full text]
  • Mcenroe, Francis John (1986) Psychoanalysis and Early Education
    McEnroe, Francis John (1986) Psychoanalysis and early education : a study of the educational ideas of Sigmund Freud (1856-1939), Anna Freud (1895-1982), Melanie Klein (1882-1960), and Susan Isaacs (1885- 1948). PhD thesis. http://theses.gla.ac.uk/2094/ Copyright and moral rights for this thesis are retained by the author A copy can be downloaded for personal non-commercial research or study, without prior permission or charge This thesis cannot be reproduced or quoted extensively from without first obtaining permission in writing from the Author The content must not be changed in any way or sold commercially in any format or medium without the formal permission of the Author When referring to this work, full bibliographic details including the author, title, awarding institution and date of the thesis must be given Glasgow Theses Service http://theses.gla.ac.uk/ [email protected] PSYCHOANALYSIS AND EARLY EDUCATION :A STUDY OF THE EDUCATIONAL IDEAS OF SIGMUND FREUD (1856-1939), ANNA FREUD (1895-1982), MELANIE KLEIN (1882-1960), AND SUSAN ISAACS (1885-1948). Submitted by Francis John NIcEnroe, M. A., M. Ed., for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, in the Department of Education. Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Glasgow. September, 1986. 11 But there is one topic which I cannot pass over so easily - not, however, because I understand particularly much about it or have contributed very much to it. Quite the contrary: I have scarcely concerned myself with it at all. I must mention it because it is so exceedingly important, so rich in hopes for the future, perhaps the most important of all the activities of analysis.
    [Show full text]
  • Siegfried Bernfeld
    Siegfried Bernfeld Pour les articles homonymes, voir Bernfeld. En 1912 il publie son premier article dans l'International Siegfried Bernfeld Journal of Psychoanalysis[4]. En 1913 il devient membre de la Société psychanalytique Siegfried Bernfeld, né le 7 mai 1892, à Lemberg, de Vienne[6]. En 1913, il est membre invité de la Société Galicie, aujourd'hui Lviv, en Ukraine, et mort le 2 psychologique du mercredi[7]. avril 1953, à San Francisco, est un pédagogue et un Entre mai 1913 et juillet 1914 il est avec Georg Gre- psychanalyste autrichien. Il est notamment un pionnier de tor alias Georges Barbizon, co-rédacteur de Der An- l'éducation nouvelle. fang, Zeitschrift der Jugend, sous la responsabilité de Gustav Wyneken ( théologien et célèbre réformateur qui avait fondé une freie Schulgemeinde “communauté d'éducation libre” à Wickersdorf) ; la revue, qui fait scan- 1 Biographie dale à l'époque, et à laquelle contribue également Walter Benjamin ( alias Ardor) , cesse de paraître à la déclara- Jeune, il prend un rôle actif, et précoce, dans les mou- tion de guerre[8],[9]. En 1914, il publie Die Neue Jugend vements de jeunesse et sionistes alors en pleine ébulli- und die Frauen[6]. tion. Porté par ses convictions socialistes, dans une pé- Le 08 janvier 1915 il épouse Anna Salomon à Vienne, riode troublée marquée par la guerre, la chute de l'empire, sous la loi mosaïque. Ils se sont connus à Munich à l'été le moment dit "Vienne la Rouge”, l'avènement de la 1913 et ont passé ensemble un semestre à Freibergen en République de Weimar, l'austrofascisme et la montée du 1914.
    [Show full text]
  • DDSR Document Scanning
    IDh) r ~rnttisl1 ~nriety (@f iqr t;istnry nf :!Iebiriue (Founded April, 1948) REPORT OF PROCEEDINGS SESSION 2000-2001 and 2001-2002 UJ4e .§cottt54 ~n(t.ety of t4e 1A"ii5tnry of :atebictnr OFFICE BEARERS (2000-2001) (2001-2002) President Dr J FORRESTER Dr DJ WRIGHT Vice-Presidents DrHTSWAN DrJFORRESTER DrDJWRIGHT Dr B ASHWORTH HOt! Secretm:v DrAR BUTLER DrARBUTLER Hon Treasurer Dr J SIMPSON Dr J SIMPSON Hon Auditor Dr RUFUS ROSS Dr RUFUS ROSS Hot! Editor Dr DJ WRIGHT Dr DJ WRIGHT Council Dr B ASHWORTH Dr DAVID BOYD Mrs AILSA BLAIR Mr J CHALMERS Mr J CHALMERS Dr JAMES GRAY MRS E GEISSLER Mrs M HAGGART Dr JAMES GRAY Prof RI McCALLUM Or E JELLINEK OrK MILLS Mrs M HAGGART Mr I MILNE Prof RI McCALLUM Or RUFUS ROSS ProfTH PENNINGTON Dr MJ WILLIAMS IDqc ~cotttsq ~octcty ®ftqc 1!;tstory of mrbtctnc (Founded April, 1948) Report ofProceedings CONTENTS a) The Health of Dundee Jute Workers Dr Anne Hargreaves b) The National Health Service- The Plan for Scotland 9 Dr Morrice McCrae c) Dr lan MacQueen and the Aberdeen Typhoid Outbreak of 1964 16 Dr Lesley Diack & Dr David Smith d) Thomas Winterbottom and the Welfare of Mariners 24 Dr Stuart Menzies e) Our Unique NHS: Past, Present and Future? 30 Sir Alexander Macara f) Some Caithness Doctors and Diseases 38 Dr David Boyd g) Sir John Franklin and Polar Medicine 43 Mr Ken Mills h) A Minister's Brilliant Progeny 45 Mr Roy Miller i) A Decided Novelty for the British Army 49 Dr John Cule j) Penrose, Eugenics and Scotland 51 Dr David Watt k) Alfred Nobel and the Medical Prizes 59 Dr B,yan Ashworth 1) Transplantation ofTeeth 61 Dr Henry Noble m) The Russell Family 65 Dr Ernest Jellinek SESSION 2000-2001 and 2001-2002 The Scottish Society of the History of Medicine REPORT OF PROCEEDINGS SESSION 2000-2001 THE FIFTY SECOND ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING The Fifty Second Annual General of the Society was held at the Verdant Works, Dundee on the 4'h November 2000.
    [Show full text]
  • Freud's Scientific Beginnings
    FREUD'S SCIENTIFIC BEGINNINGS. Bernfeld, Siegfried American Imago; a Psychoanalytic Journal for the Arts and Sciences; Sep 1, 1949; 6, 3; ProQuest pg. 163 FREUD'S SCIENTIFIC BEGINNINGS. by Siegfried Bernfeld, Ph. D., San Francisco. Copyright 1949 by Siegfried Bernfeld Ph. D. The childhood phantasies and the adolescent day dreams of Freud, as far as we know them, do not foretell the future originator of psychoanalysis. They fit a general, a reformer or a business executive rather than the patient, fulltime listener to petty complaints, humdrum stories and the re- counting of irrational sufferings. It was a long way from the child who devoured Thier’s story of Napoleon’s power; who identified himself with the Marshall Massena, Duke of Tivoli and Prince of Essling, to the psychoanalyst who cheer- fully admits that he has, in fact, very little control even over those symptoms and disturbances which he has learned to understand so well. Twelve years old, he still thinks of him- self as a candidate for cabinet rank and, as an adolescent, he plans to become a lawyer, and to go into politics. Then, at seventeen, shortly after his graduation from high school, Freud suddenly retreats from his search for power over men. ‘‘The urge to understand something about the mysteries of the world and maybe contribute somewhat to their solution became overwhelming’’. (1) He turns to the more sublime power over nature, through science, and he decides to study ‘‘natural history’’—biology to us today. Power, prestige and wealth should come to him only contingent to his being a great scientist.
    [Show full text]
  • Ed 288 74; Se 048 756
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 288 74; SE 048 756 AUTHOR Bruno, Leonard C. TITLE The Tradition of Science: Landmarks of Western Science in the Collections of the Library of Congress. INSTITUTION Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. REPORT NO ISBN-0-8444-0528-0 PUB DATE 87 NOTE 359p.; Some color photographs may not reproduce well. AVAILABLE FROMSuperintendent of Documents, Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402 ($30.00). PUB TYPE Books (010) -- Reference Aaterials - Bibliographies (131) -- Historical Materials (060) EDRS PRICE MFO1 Plus Postage. PC Not Available from EDRS. DESCRIPTORS Astronomy; Botany; Chemistry; *College Mathematics; *College Science; Geology; Higher Education; Mathematics Education; Medicine; Physics; *Science and Society; Science Education; *Science History; *Scientific and Technical Information; Zoology ABSTRACT Any real understanding of where we stand scientifically today and where we are headed depends to a great extent on an awareness of how we reached those scientific achievements. The increased impact of science and technology on our lives makes such an understanding even more important. For this reason, this book is intended to provide information about the major works of science in the collections of the Library of Congress. These selected works are organized here by traditional scientific discipline and are treated in historical and, generally, chronological order. The contents contain chapters on: (1) astronomy; (2) botany; (3) zoology; (4) medicine; (5) chemistry; (6) geology; (7) mathematics; and (8) physics. A bibliography provides information about particular Library of Congress collections to which a book or manuscript may belong, as well as specific bibliographic information. Title translations are also included. (TW) *********************************************************************** Reproductions supplied by EDRS are the best that can be made from the original document.
    [Show full text]
  • Chapter 4 the Genesis of Karl Popper's Philosophical
    CHAPTER 4 THE GENESIS OF KARL POPPER’S PHILOSOPHICAL IDEAS 4.0 Introduction Karl Popper was one of the most prominent philosophers in the past century as he has been the most prolific, wide-ranging and the most influential among scientists. This sentence is evident as attested to the statement made by Sir Peter Medawar, a winner of the Nobel Prize for medicine and himself an experienced analyst of scientific thought and practise, that says: ‘I think Popper is incomparably the greatest philosopher of science that has ever been.’ Medawar’s judgment was subsequently affirmed by other eminent scientists, such as Sir Herman Bondi, who wrote, ‘there is no more to science than its method, and there is no more to its method than Popper has said’; and in similar vein, Sir John Eccles, another Nobel Prize winner, testified to the impact of Popper’s philosophy on his approach to research: ‘my scientific life owes so much to my conversion in 1945… to Popper’s teachings on the conduct of investigations… I have endeavoured to follow Popper in the formulation and in the investigation of fundamental problems in neurobiology’ (Magee 1975). Furthermore, recent survey of scholarly literature on totalitarianism and on social science methodology found him mentioned more often than any philosopher, including Hannah Arendt, Ludwig Wittgenstein, and Thomas Kuhn.56 And, in fact, in a time in the 56 Peter Hedström, Richard Swedberg, and Lars Udéhn in their “Popper’s Situational Analysis and Contemporary Sociology,” Philosophy of the Social Sciences, 28 (1998), 342-3, survey the five leading sociology journals in the United States, Britain, France, Germany, and Italy (1960-96).
    [Show full text]