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Topic: Ludwig Binswanger


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In the News (Sun 27 Dec 09)

  
  Ludwig Binswanger - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ludwig Binswanger, (April 13, 1881 - February 5, 1966) is considered the founder of existential psychology.
Ludwig Binswanger was born in Kreuzlingen, Switzerland, into a family well established in medicine and psychiatric studies.
In the early 1920s, Binswanger became interested in the work of Edmund Husserl, Martin Heidegger, and Martin Buber, and turned increasingly towards an existential rather than Freudian perspective, so that by the early 1930s he had become the first existential therapist.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Ludwig_Binswanger   (369 words)

  
 Ludwig Binswanger -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Ludwig Binswanger, (April 13, 1881 - February 5, 1966) is considered the founder of (additional info and facts about existential) existential (The science of mental life) psychology.
Ludwig Binswanger was born in (additional info and facts about Kreuzlingen) Kreuzlingen, (A landlocked federal republic in central Europe) Switzerland, into a family well established in (The branches of medical science that deal with nonsurgical techniques) medicine and (additional info and facts about psychiatric) psychiatric studies.
Ludwig received his (additional info and facts about medical degree) medical degree from the (additional info and facts about University of Zürich) University of Zürich in 1907.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/L/Lu/Ludwig_Binswanger.htm   (455 words)

  
 Christa Ludwig biography .ms   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Christa Ludwig (born March 16 1928) is a distinguished German mezzo-soprano, known both for her opera performances and her singing of Lieder.
Ludwig as born in Berlin to a musical family; her father, Anton Ludwig, was a tenor and an operatic administrator, her mother, the mezzo-soprano Eugenie Besalla-Ludwig who sang the Aachen Opera during Herbert von Karajan's period as conductor.
Ludwig made her debut in 1946 at the age of 18 as Orlovsky in Die Fledermaus at Frankfurt, where she sang until 1952.
christa-ludwig.biography.ms   (398 words)

  
 Existential Humanistic Institute - Welcome   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Ludwig Binswanger (1881-1966), was the first to recognize and use Heidegger's ideas in a clinical context.
Binswanger first presented his concerns in his chief theoretical work, Basic Forms and Knowledge of Human Existence (1942, untranslated), which was written largely in response to the inadequate treatment of interpersonal relations in Being and Time.
Binswanger's theory of interaction suggests that therapeutic work does not simply stop when contact with the other is made or when both participants in the relationship are touched in some way by the interaction.
www.ehinstitute.org /articles?method=display&ArticleID=1007   (1376 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Binswanger was one of the founders of phenomenological psychology.
Binswanger, in contrast to Jaspers, stated that it is categorical perception directed “outward”, not introspection directed “inward” that should be the foundation of phenomenologial investigations.
For this reason in his later research Binswanger concentrated on the development of a total ”reasoning” way of doing research, a way that he thought was necessary for the humanization of psychology.
republika.pl /peenef2/angielski/hasla/b/binswanger.html   (782 words)

  
 Daseinsanalysis
Ludwig Binswanger's main oeuvre "Grundformen und Erkenntnis menschlichen Daseins" (basic forms and perception of human Dasein) was published in 1942.
Binswanger felt betrayed by Boss as well as by Heidegger, and from then on referred more to Husserl, while Boss was sponsored by Heidegger, with whom he developed a personal and scientific friendship.
While Binswanger overtly refused to institutionalize his "psychiatric Daseinsanalysis" and concentrated on basic research (rather than on psychotherapeutic values), Medard Boss, together with Gion Condrau, founded the Swiss Society for Daseinsanalysis in 1970 and the Zurich Institute for Daseinsanalytic Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics in 1971, later known as Medard Boss Foundation.
daseinsanalyse.com /ifda/daseinsanalysis.html   (1502 words)

  
 Ludwig Bechstein biography .ms   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Ludwig Bechstein (November 24, 1801 - May 14, 1860) was a German writer and collector of folk fairy tales.
He was born in Weimar, the illegitimate child of Johanna Carolina Dorothea Bechstein and Hubert Dupontreau, a French emigrant who disappeared even before the birth of the child, and Ludwig thus grew up his first nine years in very poor economic conditions.
His situation improved only when his uncle Johann Matthäus Bechstein, a renowned naturalist and forester living in Meiningen in the district of Schmalkalden-Meiningen in Thuringia, adopted him in 1810.
ludwig-bechstein.biography.ms   (193 words)

  
 Binswanger - Ludwig Binswanger Quotes   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Ludwig Binswanger was born April 13, 1881, in Kreuzlingen, Switzerland, The Ludwig Binswanger of this chapter received his MD degree from the University
Otto Binswanger is an excellent example: he and three members of his family Otto Binswanger was born in Münsterlingen, Switzerland, on October 14, 1852.
Binswanger's phenomenology of the clinical encounter stressed the role of For the majority of Binswanger's asylum patients, however, who suffered from
easynetusa.com /?q=binswanger   (226 words)

  
 APsaA   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Ludwig Binswanger was introduced to Freud in 1907 and they remained close until Freud’s death despite significant differences in their ages and theoretical perspectives— a friendship that is a tribute to Binswanger’s generous and warm personality.
Binswanger, a Swiss who came from a distinguished family of psychiatrists and physicians was influenced not only by Jung but also by Husserl, Heidegger, and Buber.
His two famous cases are “The Case of Lola Voss” reprinted in Being in the World: Selected Papers of Ludwig Binswanger (1963) and “The Case of Ellen West” in Existence: A New Dimension in Psychiatry and Psychology edited by Rollo May, et al.
apsa.org /ctf/pubinfo/about/bios/binswanger.html   (278 words)

  
 An Epistemology of the Clinic: Ludwig Binswanger's Phenomenology of the Other by Susan Lanzoni
Binswanger's phenomenology of the clinical encounter stressed the role of the clinician as the epistemological instrument of perception and feeling and offered a striking alternative to the patient-psychiatrist encounter as described by psychoanalysis.
In formulating a hybrid science melding the domains of philosophy and psychiatry, Binswanger went further than most in demonstrating the potential of phenomenology to bridge intellectual and practical worlds: from European psychiatric asylum practice, to critiques of psychoanalysis, to philosophical discourse on intersubjectivity.
Binswanger, in contrast, boldly claimed that phenomenological intuition and empathy could provide a direct pathway to understanding the psychotic person holistically.
www.uchicago.edu /research/jnl-crit-inq/issues/v30/30n1.Lanzoni.html   (798 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: Ludwig Binswanger
Jump to: navigation, search Psychology (Classical Greek: psyche = soul or mind, logos = study of) is an academic and applied field involving the study of behavior and its relationship to the mind and brain.
Binswangers disease is a rare form of multi-infarct dementia caused by damage to deep white brain matter.
Jump to: navigation, search Sigmund Freud Sigmund Freud (May 6, 1856 – September 23, 1939;) was an Austrian neurologist and the founder of the psychoanalytic school of psychology, based on his theory that unconscious motives control much behavior, that particular kinds of unconscious thoughts and memories, especially sexual and aggressive ones...
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Ludwig-Binswanger   (1025 words)

  
 Ludwig Binswanger
Ludwig Binswanger was born April 13, 1881, in Kreuzlingen, Switzerland, into a family already well established in a medical and psychiatric tradition: His grandfather, also named Ludwig, founded Bellevue Sanatoriaum in Kreuzlingen in 1857.
The Ludwig Binswanger of this chapter received his M.D. degree from the University of Zurich in 1907.
Binswanger sees inauthenticity as a matter of choosing a single theme for one's life, or a small number of themes, and allowing the rest of Dasein to be dominated by that one theme.
www.ship.edu /~cgboeree/binswanger.html   (5734 words)

  
 Otto Binswanger (1852-1929) -- Hoff 159 (4): 538 -- American Journal of Psychiatry   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
became Ludwig’s successor as director of the asylum.
of 30, Binswanger was appointed professor of psychiatry and
Binswanger was part of the strong neuropsychiatric movement
ajp.psychiatryonline.org /cgi/content/full/159/4/538   (387 words)

  
 Ludwig Binswanger --  Encyclopædia Britannica
The 19th-century German novelist, playwright, and critic Otto Ludwig is best known for his realistic stories, which contributed to the development of the German short narrative form known as the novelle.
Historian and politician Ludwig Quidde was one of the most prominent German pacifists of the 20th century.
From 1914 to 1929 he served as chairman of the German Peace Society and criticized his country's military policies both during and after World War I. He was the cowinner (with French educator Ferdinand Buisson) of the Nobel prize for peace in 1927.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9079242   (678 words)

  
 Ludwig Binswanger   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Ludwig Binswanger was born April 13, 1881, in Kreuzlingen, Switzerland.
In the early 1920's, Binswanger cultivated an interest in Edmund Husserl, Martin Heidegger, and Martin Buber, and turned increasingly towards an existential rather than Freudian perspective.
During such therapy, Binswanger, like other existential psychologists, made a point of discovering their client's world view, or how the world appears to them.
brainmeta.com /personality/binswanger.php   (516 words)

  
 Ludwig Biermann biography .ms   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Ludwig Franz Benedict Biermann (March 13 1907 – January 12 1986) was a German astronomer.
He made important contributions to astrophysics and plasma physics.
He won the Bruce Medal in 1967 and the Gold Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society in 1974.
ludwig-biermann.biography.ms   (50 words)

  
 Ludwig Scotty biography .ms   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Ludwig Derangadage Scotty was President of the Republic of Nauru from May 29, 2003 to August 8, 2003, and is again President since June 22, 2004.
Hailing from Anabar district, Scotty served as Speaker of Parliament from the late 1990s until 2000.
Scotty was re-elected to Parliament in elections in October 2004, and most of his allies also did well.
ludwig-scotty.biography.ms   (155 words)

  
 The Existential and the Interpersonal" Ludwig Binswanger and Harry Stack Sullivan -- Frie 40 (3): 108 -- Journal of ...
The Existential and the Interpersonal" Ludwig Binswanger and Harry Stack Sullivan -- Frie 40 (3): 108 -- Journal of Humanistic Psychology
The Existential and the Interpersonal" Ludwig Binswanger and Harry Stack Sullivan
The Swiss psychiatrist Ludwig Binswanger is commonly known as
jhp.sagepub.com /cgi/content/abstract/40/3/108   (156 words)

  
 Humanism and Anthropology
According to Foucault, Binswanger’s merit is that of reintroducing man’s being in an ontological reflection on existence.
For Binswanger, the borderline that seems too difficult to trace between anthropological forms and ontological conditions of existence is continuously overcome by concrete existence, in which the real limit of Menschsein and of Dasein is evident.
Karl Jasper’s and Ludwig Binswanger’s existentialist psychoanalyses are an important influence on Foucault’s work at this stage.
www.generation-online.org /other/acop/acop_humanism_and_anthropology.htm   (2801 words)

  
 Yale History Visiting Assistant Professor : Susan Lanzoni   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
In November 2003, she presented a paper at the History of Science Society annual meeting in Cambridge, MA, entitled "The Prominence of Subjective Experience in Phenomenological Psychiatry" as part of a panel she organized on the topic: Subjectivity in Crisis: European Psychiatry and Patient Experience (1880-1920).
Her article on the early work of the Swiss psychiatrist Ludwig Binswanger entitled "An Epistemology of the Clinic: Ludwig Binswanger's Phenomenology of the Other" appeared in the journal Critical Inquiry in the fall of 2003.
Another article, "Existential Encounter in the Asylum: Ludwig Binswanger's 1935 Case of Hysteria," appeared in the journal History of Psychiatry in September 2004.
www.yale.edu /history/faculty/lanzoni.html   (216 words)

  
 History of Science Society 2000: Vancouver, B.C.
This historical exploration of the "microcinema" analyses the role of these films as forms of research in which the scientist was the cinematographer, and thus accesses a little-studied area of the history of experimentation.
His project was to develop a phenomenological approach that would be wedded both to the psychic realities of individual disturbed patients and to the concern of articulating systematic structures of human existence in the tradition of the human sciences.
Binswanger's first phenomenological case studies appeared in 1931, in which manic utterances and writings were found to reveal the presence of a manic "world," charted by its spatial, temporal, and material dimensions.
depts.washington.edu /hssexec/annual/abstractsp5.html   (7415 words)

  
 Hans Berger   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
In 1900 he was hired as an assistant to Otto Ludwig Binswanger (1852-1929), chairman of the University's psychiatry and neurology clinic.
He became a professor in 1906 and succeeded Binswanger in 1919.
He later served as Rector at the University of Jena (1927-1928) and eventually became Professor Emeritus in Psychology in 1938.
www.worldhistory.com /wiki/H/Hans-Berger.htm   (528 words)

  
 Absent at the Creation: The Existential Psychiatry of Ludwig Binswanger (Bradley Seidman)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Included are a section on how Binswanger creatively fused the philosophies of Martin Heidegger and Martin Buber to suit his own clinical aims, two chapters on his classic case history, the case of Ellen West, and a discussion of Binswanger's concept of "extravagance," with an example from a British case history.
Binswanger was a seminal figure in the later developments of R. Laing's "antipsychiatry" and Gilles Deleuze's "schizoanalysis" that attained popularity throughout the 1970s.
In light of the recent ideological backtraking of R. Laing in his recent book "The Voice of Experience," this look at the founder and pioneer of existential psychiatry is especially timely and pertinent.
www.interference.com /webstore/us/product/0872121755.htm   (193 words)

  
 Phenomenology Online: Scholars;
Hannah Arendt was born on October 14, 1906, in Hanover, in Wilhelmine Germany.
The special feature of the metabletical method is that it approaches its object of study not diachronically, as development through time, but synchronically, from within a meaningful constitution of relations among different events during the same shared period.
Wittgenstein, Ludwig Josef Johann (1889-1951), Austrian-British philosopher, who was one of the most influential thinkers of the 20th century, particularly noted for his contribution to the movement known as analytic and linguistic philosophy.
www.phenomenologyonline.com /scholars/scholars.html   (9009 words)

  
 Anti Essays : : Pathology arise out of the Existential Predicaments of Life.
Existentialism is the title of a set of philosophical ideas that emphasise the existence of the human being, the lack of meaning and purpose in life and the solitude of human existence.
In the 19th century existential thought is found in the writings of Soren Kirkegaard (1813-1855), Friederich Neitzche (1844-1900), Fyodor Dostoyevoski (182?-1881) and later Jean-Paul Satre (1905-1980), all of whom were opposed to the predominant philosophies, and scientific dogmas, of their time and committed to exploring the experience of reality in a passionate and personal manner.
The birth of modern existentialism can be attributed to Martin Heidegger (1889-1976), who’s thinking was applied to psychiatry, psychotherapy and psychoanalysis by Karl Jaspers (1883-1969), Ludwig Binswanger (1881-1966) and Medard Boss (1903- 1990).
www.antiessays.com /print.php?eid=1854   (2241 words)

  
 Ludwig - Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research Melbourne   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
In 1991, the Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research transferred its Branch, established and directed by Dr. Webster Cavenee, from Montreal where it was at
Like the character he created, Ludwig Bemelmans had an amazing way of getting into, and out of, one jam after another.
Ludwig Feuerbach, (1804-1872) was born in Landshut, Bavaria into a distinguished family in Atheismus in der Diskussion, Kontroversen um Ludwig Feuerbach
globalinfoplus.com /?q=ludwig   (186 words)

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