Historiography of Mental Symptoms and Diseases
Historiography of Mental Symptoms and Diseases
Historiography of Mental Symptoms and Diseases
G. E. BERRIOS*
The past
That psychiatric understanding and creativity are enhanced by knowledge of
their history was clear to nineteenth-century alienists, and some like Calmeil,
Morel, Trelat, Semelaigne, Kirshoff, Winslow, Ireland, Mercier, Bucknill and
Tuke wrote special works on psychiatric history. Most, such as Pinel, Heinroth,
Esquirol, Guislain, Prichard, Feuchtersleben, Connolly, Griesinger, Lucas,
Falret or Dagonet, included historical chapters in their classical textbooks.
Yet others, such as Haslam, emphasized the value of historical semantics:
Mad is therefore not a complex idea, as has been supposed, but a complex
term for all the forms and varieties of this disease. Our language has been
enriched with other terms expressive of this affection ....3 Heinroth himself,
influenced by eighteenth-century historicism,4 interpreted his role as one of
rescuing lost historical insights from some primordial (and fully mythical)
psychiatric past. He also subscribed to a cyclical, Vico-inspired conception,
according to which history was but the recurrence of a few great themes:
The development of mental forces in humanity is accompanied by an ever
advancing, ever more degraded degeneration of these forces.&dquo; Psychiatry,
1
As for example, the work of the late Richard Hunter and his first class collection of historical
material.
2 As expressed, for example, in books such as: Lefebre G. La Naissance de la histonoriographie
moderne (Paris: Flammarion, 1971).
3
4
Haslam, J., Observations on Madness (London: J. Callow, 1809), 4.
Engel-Janosi, F. The Growth of German Historicism. Studies in History and Political Science,
Series 62, No.2 (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University, 1944).
Heinroth, J. C., Lehrbuch der Störungen des Seelenlebens (translated by J. Schmorak), 2 vols.
(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1975), 40.
past as a mere history of errors; as to the rest of sciences, and this included
medical psychology, the history of a science [was] properly the science
itself. The new science of psychiatry belonged to both spheres or types of
science: That part of it which was philosophical contained an abstract of
that state of philosophy in every age, while that which is empirical has by no
means attained such precision and clearness as to render a knowledge of
previous opinions superfluous... He concluded: I am, therefore, obliged to
treat the history of our branch of the profession ....This he proceeded to
do in a chapter of three thousand words.
Kahlbaums great book on Die Gruppirung der psychischen Krankheiten,
perhaps the most important nosological book during the second half of the
nineteenth-century is, in essence, a historical book - and one of the best I
know - on the various classificatory paradigms for mental disorder. Thus, the
first part, which runs for about sixty pages, is fully dedicated to studying
systems which Kahlbaum classifies as multiple (e.g., Platter and Sauvages),
simple (Stark, Esquirol, Reil), and unitary (Neumann, Friedreich, Jacobi,
2
Flemming, etc. ) .
Gine y Partagas, one of the great Catalan alienists of the nineteenth-
century, presciently believed that insanity had, throughout the ages, reflected
social values: Given that the various branches of human knowledge tend to
reflect the moral and political development of the nations, no one is a better
example of this than the branch of medicine that deals with mental illness.&dquo;
Influenced by Comtean and Darwinian ideas Gine also believed that because
psychiatric concepts had an independent historical provenance, it was
legitimate to separate psychiatry from neurology.
11
Feuchtersleben (1847), op. cit., 24.
12
Kahlbaum, K., Die Gruppirung der psychischen Krankheiten und die Eintheilung der Seelenstorungen
(Danzig: A. W. Kefemann, 1863), 4-58.
13
Giné y Partagás, D., Tratado Teónco-Práctico de Frenopatologia (Madrid: Moya y Plaza, 1876), 1.
14
Kaplan, H. I. and Sadock, B. J. Modern Synopsis of Comprehensive Textbook of PsychiatrylIII
(Baltimore: Williams and Wilkins, 1981); Arieti, S. (ed.). American Handbook of Psychiatry, Vol.1,
(New York: Basic Books, 1974); Ey, H., Bernard, P. and Brisset, Ch. Manuel de psychiatrie (Paris:
Masson, 1974); Forrest, A. D., Affleck, J. W. and Zealley, A. K. (eds) Companion to Psychiatric
Studies (Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone, 1978); Sluchevski, I. F. Psiquiatria. Spanish translation
by Florencio Villa Landa and Manuel de la Loma (Mexico: Editorial Grijalbo, 1960); and Alonso-
Fernández, F. A. Fundamentos de la Psiquiatria Actual, Vol.I (Madrid: Paz Montalvo, 1976).
15
16
Zilboorg, G., A History of Medical Psychology (New York: Norton, 1941).
Alexander, F. G. and Selesnick, S. T., The History of Psychiatry : An Evaluation of Psychiatric
Thought and Practice from Pre-historic Times to the Present (New York: Harper, 1966).
17
For this see issue 3 of History of Psychiatry (1991) which is fully dedicated to current
scholarship.
18
Mora, G. and Brand, J. L. (eds), Psychiatry and its History. Methodological Problems in Research
IL: Charles Thomas, 1970).
(Springfield,
19
Braceland, F. J., Foreword. In: Ibid, vi1.
20
Marx, O. M., What is the history of psychiatry? American Journal of Orthopsychiatry, xl (1970),
593-605, 603.
21
Marx, O. M., History of psychology: a review of the last decade. Journal of the History of the
Behavioral Sciences, xiii (1977), 41-77.
22
See Young, R. M., Scholarship and the history of the behavioural sciences. History of Science, v
(1966), 1-51; and the excellent book by Danziger K., Constructing the Subject. Historical Origins of
Psychological Research (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1990).
23
Clarke, E. (ed.), Modern Methods in the History of Medicine (London: Athlone Press, 1971);
Porter, R. and Wear, A. (eds), Problems and Methods in the History of Medicine (London: Croom
Helm,
24
1987).
25
Foucault, M., Histoire de la folie à lâge classique (Paris: Gallimard, 1972).
Sedgwick, P., Michel Foucault. The anti-history of psychiatry. Psychological Medicine, x1
(1981), 235-248; Castel, R., LOrdre psychiatrique. LAge dor de laliénisme (Paris: Minuit, 1977);
Swain, G., Le Sujet de la fohe: naissance de la psychiatrie (Paris: Privat, 1977); and Gauchet, M. and
Swain,
26
G., La Pratique de lespnt humain (Paris: Gallimard, 1980).
Dörner, K., Bürger und Irre. Zur Sozialgeschachte und Wissenschaftsozaologie der Psychiatne
(Frankfurt: Europäische Verlagsanstalt, 1969); Jones, K. A History of the Mental Health Services
(London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1972); Scull, A. T. Museums of Madness. The Social
Organization of Insanity in Nineteenth-Century England (London: Allen Lane, 1979); and Scull, A. T.
(ed.), Madhouses, Mad-doctors and Madmen. The Social History of Psychiatry in the Victorian Era
(London: Athlone Press, 1981); Alexander, M. D. The Administration of Madness and Attitudes
Towards the Insane in 19th century Paris. Doctoral Dissertation (Baltimore: John Hopkins Press,
1976); Castel, R., Castel, F. and Lovell, A., La Société psychiatnque avancée (Paris: Grasset et
Fasquelle, 1979); Blasius, D., Der vervaltete Wahnsann. Eine Sozzalgeschichte des Irrenhauses
(Frankfurt: Fischer Taschenbuck, 1980); Cooter, R., The Cultural Meaning of Popular Science.
Phrenology and the Organization of Consent in 19th Century Britain (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1984); Digby, A., Madness, Morality and Medicine (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1985); Alvarez-Uria F. Miserables y Locos (Barcelona: Tusquet, 1983); Comelles,J
M. La razón y la sinrazón (Barcelona: PPU, 1988); Porter, R., Mznd-forgd Manacles (London:
Athlone Press, 1987).
27
Werlinder, H., Psychopathy. A History of the Concepts: Analysis of the Origin and Development of a
Family of Concepts in Psychopathology (Uppsala: Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis, 1978); Janzarik, W.
(ed.), Psychopathologie als Grundlagenwissenschaft (Stuttgart: Enke, 1979); Wallace, E. R. IV and
Pressley, L. C. Essays on the History of Psychiatry (South Carolina: Hall Psychiatric Institute, 1980);
Simon, B., Mind and Madness an Ancient Greece. The Classical Roots of Modern Psychiatry (Ithaca:
Cornell University Press, 1978); Sauri, J. J., Historia de las ideas psiquiátricas (Buenos Aires: Carlos
Lohle, 1969); Roccatagliata, G., Storia della psichiatria biologica (Florence: Nuova Guaraldi, 1981);
López Piñero, J. M., Origenes históricos del concepto de neurosis (Valencia: Instituto de Historia de la
Medicina, 1963); López Piñero J. M., Historical Ongins of the Concept of Neurosis (translated by D.
Berrios) (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983); Lopez Piñero, J. M. and Morales
Meseguer, J. M.. Neurosis y psicoterapia. Un estudio histórico (Madrid: Espasa-Calpe, 1970);Clarke,
B., Mental Disorders in Earlier Britain: Exploratory Studies (Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 1 975);
Dewhurst, K., Hughlings Jackson on Psychiatry (Oxford: Sandford Publications, 1982; Bercherie, P.,
Les Fondements de la clinique. Histoire et structure du savoir psychiatrique (Paris: La Bibliothèque
dOrnicar, 1980); Postel, J. and Quétel, C. (eds), Nouvelle Histoire de la psychiatne (Paris: Privat,
1983); Leibbrand, W. and Wettley, A. Der Wahnsinn (Munich: Karl Alber, 1961).
28
29
Kuhn, T., The Structure of Scientific Revolutions (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1962).
Farrell, B. A., The progress of psychology. British Journal of Psychology, lxix (1978), 1-8;
Warren, N., Is a scientific revolution taking place in psychology? Scientific Studies, 1 (1971),
407-413; Lambie, J., The misuse of Kuhn in psychology. The Psychologist : Bulletin of the British
Psychological
30
Society, i (1991) 6-11.
Helmer, O. and Rescher, N., On the epistemology of the inexact sciences. Management
Science, viii (1959), 25-52.
31
32
Zilboorg (1941) (Note 15), op. cat.; Alexander and Selesnick (1966) (Note 16), op. cit.
Daumezón, G., Légitimité de lintérêt pour lhistoire de la psychiatrie. LInformation
psychiatrique, lxv (1980), 647-653.
33
See: Renouard, P. V., Histoire de la médecine. 2 Vols (Paris: Bailliére, 1846); Boyer, L., Histoire
de la médecine. In Dechambre, A. and Lereboullet, L. (eds), Dictionnaire encyclopédique des sciences
médicales (Paris: Masson, 1872), 1-209; in relation to Spain, the excellent: Bujosa, F., Filosofia e
Hastoriografia Médica en España (Madrid: Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas, 1989).
34
See, for example, the approach of Kirchhoff, Th., Geschichte der Psychiatne (Leipzig: Franz
Deuticke,
35
1912).
36
Lovejoy, A. O., The Great Chain of Being (Boston: Harvard University Press, 1936).
37
Zilboorg (1941), (Note 15), op. cit.
Butterfield, H., The Whig Interpretation of History (London: Bell, 1931); Hesse, M. B., Reasons
and evaluations in the history of science. In Teich, M. and Young, R. (eds), Changing Perspectives in
the History of Science. Essays in honour of Joseph Needham (London: Heinemann, 1973), 127-147;
Agassi, J., Toward an historiography of science. History and Theory. Studies in the Philosophy of
History. Bei heft 2 (Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 1963).
38
See, for example, Altschule, M. D. The Development of Traditional Psychopathology. A Sourcebook
(New York: John Wiley, 1976).
39
On this see the Bloor, D., Knowledge and Social Imagery. Second edition (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1991); Jardine, N., The Fortunes of Inquiry (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986) and
Jardine,
40
N., The Scenes of Inquiry (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1991).
For a very early manifesto of this view see Laugel A. Science et philosophie (Paris: Mallet-
Bachelier, 1863).
discovery and justification, all of which have come under attack.&dquo; Although
in this model there apparently was little room for non-intellectual and
contextual considerations, it gave rise to good works in areas such as the
history of the natural sciences and medicine.42 This traditional approach was
less successful in the field of the behavioural sciences (including the history
of psychopathology) because categories such as discovery, observation,
replication, evidence, and experiment,43 were even harder to define, and
because these subjects depend so much on the deft use of metaphors.44
In the English-speaking world, the conceptual revolution alluded to
above started during the 1950s in the work of Toulmin45 and Hanson46 who
proposed new models for scientific change. Following the lead of Gaston
Bachelard, the much neglected French historian of science, 41 these authors
challenged the image of science as an exercise in pure rationality, and
suggested that historical accuracy had been sacrificed to superficial order and
dubious progressivist views. Philosophers of science were also dissatisfied
with the inductivist view which was, in fact, challenged by Popper as early as
1934.48 Although Poppers notion of falsification was not free from
inductivist assumptions, the libertarian tones of his prose served as an
exhortation against non-cognitivism and irrationality. Popper also attacked
psychoanalysis as non-scientific and this caused some consternation amongst
historians of psychiatry. Imre Lakatos49 went on to propound a rational
reconstruction of the past and this view influenced notable historians of
psychiatry such as Otto Marx.50 Since this time the philosophy of science has
struggled to remain under the umbrella of a cautious realism. 51
In his Structure of Scientific Revolutions&dquo; Kuhn offered a bad pastiche
of Bachelardian ideas by suggesting that science was a succession of
41
42
Kragh, H., The Historiography of Science (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987).
See, for example, Hall, J. K. (ed.), One Hundred Years of American Psychiatry (New York:
Columbia University Press, 1944).
43
44
Danziger, K. (1990). (Note 22), op. cit.
On this see: Sternberg, R. J., Metaphors of Mind. Conceptions of the Nature of Intelligence
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990); Leary D. E. (ed.), Metaphors in the History of
Psychology (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990).
5
46
Toulmin, S., The Philosophy of Science (London: Hutchinson, 1953).
47
Hanson, N. R., Patterns of Discovery (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1958).
See Lecourt, D., Gaston Bachelards historical epistemology. In Marxism and Epistemology.
Bachelard,
48
Canguilhem, Foucault (London: NLB, 1975 (first published in 1969)), 25-116.
49
Popper, K., The Logic of Scientific Discovery (London: Hutchinson, 1968).
Hacking, I., Imre Lakatoss philosophy of science. British Journal for the Philosophy of Science,
xxx (1979), 381-410; Lakatos, I. and Musgrave, A. (eds), Criticism and the Growth of Knowledge
(Cambridge:
50
Cambridge University Press, 1970).
See Marx (1977), (Note 21), op. cit.
51
The literature in this area is enormous. The psychiatrist will find useful Suppe, F. (ed.), The
Structure of Scientific Theories (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1977); Meyer, M., Decouverte et
justification en science (Paris: Klincksieck, 1979); Smith, P., Realism and the Progress of Science
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,1981); and Jardine (1986), (Note 39), op. cit.
prevailing paradigms. One problem with Kuhns model was the ambiguity of
its operative categories, for example, paradigm has more than twenty
meanings.53 This account proved popular in the 1960s and had some
influence on the history of the behavioural sciences,54 causing the neglect of
the profounder work of Dilthey,55 Politzer,56 and Bachelard57 and of the
Continental historiographic schools.58
Psychiatry is not a contemplative but a modificatory activity and clinicians
are primarily interested in the power of psychopathological descriptions to
predict the outcome of disease; such power as they may have is assumed to
stem from their truth-value, i.e. their capacity to picture the reality of
mental illness. To reach this ideal state, symptom-descriptions must be
unencumbered by semantic confusion and based on multiple and reliable
clinical observations. The history of psychopathology could be defined as the
historical study of the words, concepts and putative disorders of behaviour
involved in the definition of symptoms&dquo;9 and their clusters.6 Such history
52
See Kuhn, (Note 28), op. cit., also Stove, D. C., Popper and After: Four Modern Irrationalists
(Oxford: Pergamon Press, 1982); and Hacking, I. (ed.), Scientific Revolutions (Oxford: Oxford
University
53
Press, 1981).
Masterman, M., The nature of a paradigm. In Lakatos, I. and Musgrave, A. (eds) Criticism
and the Growth of Knowledge (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1970), 59-90
54
Tortosa, F., Mayor, L. and Carpintero, H. (eds), La Psicologia Contemporánea desde la
Historiografia
55
(Barcelona: PPU, 1990).
Dilthey, W,. Einleitung in die Geisteswissenschaften. Vol. I (Leipzig: Duncker und Humboldt,
1883); Martin-Santos, L., Dilthey, Jaspers y la comprensión del enfermo mental (Madrid: Paz
Montalvo, 1955); López, A., Comprensióne interpretación en las ciencias del espintu (Murcia:
Universidad de Murcia, 1990).
56
See Roelens, R., Une recherche psychologique méconnue, le courant dramatique de G.
Politzer à aujourdhui. La Pensée No.103 (1962), 76-101; Deleule D. La Psychologie, mythe
scientifique (Paris: Laffont, 1969); Pohtzer, G., Critique des fondements de la psychologie (Paris: Presses
Universitaires de France, 1967 (first published in 1927)).
57
See Lecourt (1975), (Note 47), op. cit.
58
See Chartier, R., El Mundo como Representación. Historia Cultural: entre Práctica y Representación
(Barcelona: Gedisa, 1992); Bauer, H., Kunsthistorik. Eine kritische Einfuhrung in das Studium der
Kunstgeschichte (Munich: Oskar Beck, 1976); Juliá, S., Historia Social/Sociologia Histórica (Madrid:
Siglo Veintiuno, 1989); Gagnon, S., Man and his Past. The Nature and Role of Historiography
(Montreal: Harvest House, 1982).
59
In regard to the definition of symptom and sign in descriptive psychopathology, the historian is
at the convergence point of two traditions: on the one hand, the older semiological approach
started at the beginning of the nineteenth century in the work of Landre-Beauvais, A. J.,
Séméiotique, ou traité des signes des maladies (Paris: Brosson, 1813); on the other, the modern
linguistic one, started at the beginning of the twentieth by De Saussure; on this see: Korner, E. F.
K., Ferdinand de Saussure (Madrid: Gredos, 1982); Malmberg, B., Teoria de los signos (Madrid: Siglo
Veintiuno, 1977); Lanteri-Laura, G., Les Apports de la linguistique à la psychiatrie contemporaine
(Paris: Masson, 1966); Berrios, G. E., Descriptive psychopathology: conceptual and historical
aspects. Psychological Medicine, xiv (1984), 303-313
Clusters refer here to the way in which certain symptoms show a higher statistical probability
of being found together. Corroboration for such phenomena can be made by observational (clinical)
or statistical means. Clusters have been fundamental to the development of nosological theory, i.e.
to the view that symptom-sets or syndromes reflect the activity of specific causal mechanisms (see
Faber, K., Nosography in Modern Internal Medicine (London: Milford, 1923; also Hoche, A., The
significance of symptom complexes in psychiatry. History of Psychiatry, ii (1991), 329-343).
61
62
Braudel, F., La Historia y las Ciencias (Madrid: Alianza Editorial, 1980).
American Psychiatric Association: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. Third
Edition, Revised (Washington, DC: American Psychiatric Association, 1987).
63
See Devereux, G., Normal and abnormal. In Basic Problems in Ethnopsychiatry (Chicago: The
University of Chicago Press, 1980), 3-71.
64
For the debate on this topic see: Barnes, B., Scientific Knowledge and Sociological Theory
(London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1972); Bury, M. R., Social constructionism and the
development of medical sociology. Sociology of Health and Illness, viii (1986), 137-169; and
Nicolson, M. and McLaughlin, C., Social constructionism and medical psychology: a reply to M.
R. Bury. Sociology of Health and Illness, ix (1987), 107-126; and Bury, M. R., Social
constructionism and medical sociology: a rejoinder to Nicolson and McLaughlin. Sociology of
Health and Illness, ix (1987), 439-441.
65
See Jardine (1991), op. cit.
66
See, for example, Berrios, G. E., Alzheimers disease: a conceptual history. International
Journal of Genatric Psychiatry, v (1990), 355-365.
67
Quantitative methodologies have been made easier by the advent of computer technology.
Basically, this approach consists in treating historical databases as if they were sets of case notes
studied in retrospective clinical studies. Such work has four stages: choice of diagnostic criteria,
inter-rater reliability studies, data capture, and data analysis. Diagnostic criteria can be chosen that
are contemporary to the database (for example, if one is to test the historical reliability of the
category in question) or to the current researcher. Once the operational definitions are ready two
raters should be trained to rate the data independently. Kappa coefficients should be calculated for all
symptoms and those which are <0.70 should be re-defined. The captured data may be entered into
a computer spreadsheet or matrix and subject to the usual tests for quality control. Statistical
analysis should be carried out having in mind that data in this type of study (except for patients age,
duration of stay, and a few other variables) tend to be categorical - i.e. symptoms rated as present
or absent. This determines the type of statistical techniques to be used. When data are adequate,
pattern recognition techniques such as principal component analysis, cluster analysis, and
discriminant function analysis can be used with advantage. Results can be rewarding: for example,
that the data do not support the conclusions that a given alienist drew at the time by simply eye-
balling his data; or that a prototypical patient (extracted from a database on the strength of which a
new disease was invented!), does not correspond to the current definition of the disease.
68
As examples of this, see: Berrios, G. E., Epilepsy and insanity during the early 19th century.
Archives of Neurology, xli (1984), 978; Berrios, G. E., Depressive pseudodementia or melancholic
dementia: a 19th century view. Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Psychiatry, xlviii (1985), 393;
Berrios, G. E. and Quemada, J. I., Andre Ombredane and the psychiatry of multiple sclerosis: a
conceptual and statistical history. Comprehensive Psychiatry, xxxi (1990), 438; Berrios, G. E.,
Affective disorder in old age: a conceptual history. International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, vii
(1991),337.
69
For example, see the attack on the notion of mentality by Lloyd, G. E. R. Demystifying
Mentalities (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990) or the superb analysis of symbols by
Garagalza, L., La Interpretación de los Simbolos. Hermenéutica y Lenguage en la Filosofia Actual
(Barcelona: Anthropos, 1990).
70
See Berrios (1984), op. cit.
71
Bechtel, W. and Richardson, R. C., Discovering Complexity (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University
Press,
72
1993).
The traditional history of psychology was a well populated field, and tended to emphasize the
biographical and thematic aspects of psychology (e.g., Boring, E. G. A History of Experimental
Final commentary
This article has dealt with the historical needs of clinicians and with the
historiographical approaches that, in their ignorance or naivete, they are
happy to follow. These approaches, called conceptual and quantitative
relate to the historical analysis of symptoms and diseases, and to the
statistical analysis of historical databases, respectively. The said historical
analysis must be mindful of the fact that it is dealing with a complex mixture
of sub-scripts which directly and independently relate to the history of the
words, concepts and behaviours involved in the construction of a symptom.
In this sense, the history of descriptive psychopathology is seen as paying
attention both to constructional elements (by accepting that the semantic
content of the terms involved may markedly change from period to period,
and is socially-dependent) and to the (often biological) invariants that
confer continuity to particular forms of peculiar behaviour. In this latter
respect, clinical historians entertain a form of naive realism of which (qua
medics), they do not need to feel ashamed.
Collaboration between professional historians and clinicians could render
the conceptual history approach into a fine art. The ensuing body of
knowledge not only would provide real historians with solid foundations for
their macro-concepts, but also constitute a direct contribution to clinical
understanding and patient care. A result like this should be the best remedy
for those chronically affected by historiographic pangs.