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Showing papers in "British Journal of Medical Psychology in 1959"



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It would be inane to reduce the complex aetiology of schizophrenia to a simple formula stating that an individual becomes schizophrenic because some other individual drives him crazy, because that formula would not do justice to the individual’s own psychological activity in the situation.
Abstract: Among all the factors in the aetiology of schizophrenia, factors which are undoubtedly complex and, further, considerably variable from one case to another, there appears to be one specific ingredient which can often-and even, I believe, regularly-be found to be operative. My clinical experience has indicated that the individual becomes schizophrenic partly by reason of a long-continued effort, a largely or wholly unconscious effort, on the part of some person or persons highly important in his upbringing, to drive him crazy. I well know that it would be inane to reduce the complex aetiology of schizophrenia to a simple formula stating that an individual becomes schizophrenic because some other individual drives him crazy. Such a formula would not do justice to the individual’s own psychological activity in the situation, to the complexity of that particular interpersonal relationship, to the complex group-processes of the family situation, or to the larger sociodynamic processes in which the family plays but a part-often a part in which the family as a whole is helpless to deal with large and tragic circumstances quite beyond any family’s capacity to control or avert.

121 citations








Journal ArticleDOI

18 citations