Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Ernst Kretschmer

 

(born Oct. 8, 1888, Wüstenrot, Ger. — died Feb. 8, 1964, Tübingen, W.Ger.) German psychiatrist. In his best-known work, Physique and Character (1921), he attempted to correlate body build and physical constitution with character and mental illness, identifying three physical types — the pyknic (rotund), the athletic (muscular), and the asthenic (tall and thin) — and claiming that different psychiatric disorders were associated with each. His system was later adapted by the American psychologist William H. Sheldon (1899 – 1977), who renamed the types endomorph, mesomorph, and ectomorph and focused on their associated personality traits. Both theorists' work entered into popular culture and generated further research.

For more information on Ernst Kretschmer, visit Britannica.com.

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
World of the Mind: Ernst Kretschmer
Top
(1888–1964). German psychiatrist, educated at the University of Munich, where he studied under Emil Kraepelin. He worked at Tübingen and then at Marburg, where he was appointed professor of psychiatry and neurology. He is best known for his books Körperbau und Charakter (1921; English trans. Physique and Character, 1925) and Geniale Menschen (1929; English trans. The Psychology of Men of Genius, 1931). Although his attempts to correlate body build with types of psychosis proved to have little importance in psychiatric diagnosis, Kretschmer's work did much to reawaken interest in the relations between body build and qualities of temperament or personality.

(Published 1987)

— O. L. Zangwill



Wikipedia: Ernst Kretschmer
Top
Ernst Kretschmer

Ernst Kretschmer
Born October 8, 1888
Wüstenrot
Died February 8, 1964
Tübingen
Nationality Germany
Fields psychiatry
Institutions Marburg University
Known for typology
Part of a series of articles on
Socionics

Important works
Dual Nature of Man

Concepts
Information Metabolism
Information Elements
Intertype Relationships
Sociotypes
Model-A

Important figures
Aušra Augustinavičiūtė
Antoni Kępiński
Carl Jung
Sigmund Freud
Ernst Kretschmer
Pyotr Gannushkin
Karl Leongard
A. E. Lichko

Socionic Theorist
Alexander Bukalov
Victor Gulenko
Gregory Reinin


Socionic Types

ILELIIESESEI
SLELSIEIEIEI
LIEILISEEESI
LSESLIILEILE

Schools of thought

Informational
Sociological
Humanitarian
Bio-psychological
Linguistic

Psychology portal


Ernst Kretschmer (* October 8, 1888 in Wüstenrot near Heilbronn (Germany); † February 8, 1964 in Tübingen) Prof. Dr. med. Dr. phil. h.c., was a psychiatrist who researched the human constitution and established a typology .

Contents

Life

He attended Cannstatt Hochschule, one of the oldest Latin schools in Stuttgart. From 1906 to 1912 he studied theology, medicine, and philosophy at the universities of Tübingen, Munich and Hamburg. From 1913 he was assistant of Robert Gaupp in Tübingen, where he received his habilitation in 1918. He continued as assistant medical director until 1926.

Kretschmer was the first to describe the persistent vegetative state which has also been called Kretschmer's syndrome. Another medical term coined after him is Kretschmer’s sensitive paranoia.[1] And between 1915 and 1921 he developed a differential diagnosis between schizophrenia and manic depression.

Kretschmer is also known for developing a classification system that can be seen as one of the earliest exponents of a constitutional (the total plan or philosophy on which something is constructed) approach. His classification system was based on three main body types: asthenic/leptosomic (thin, small, weak), athletic (muscular, large–boned), and pyknic (stocky, fat). (The athletic category was later combined into the category asthenic/leptosomic.) Each of these body types was associated with certain personality traits and, in a more extreme form, psychopathologies. Kretschmer believed that pyknic persons were friendly, interpersonally dependent, and gregarious. In a more extreme version of these traits, this would mean for example that the obese are predisposed toward manic-depressive illness. Thin types were associated with introversion and timidity. This was seen as a milder form of the negative symptoms exhibited by withdrawn schizophrenics. However, the idea of the association of body types with personality traits is no longer influential in personality theory.

In 1926 he became the director of the psychiatric clinic at Marburg University.

Kretschmer was a founding member of the AÄGP (General medical society for psychotherapy) which was founded on January 12, 1927. He was the president of AÄGP from 1929. In 1933 he resigned from the AÄGP for political reasons, but started to support the SS and signed the "Bekenntnis der Professoren an den deutschen Universitäten und Hochschulen zu Adolf Hitler und dem nationalsozialistischen Staat". [1] He did not oppose the eugenic laws of Nazi Germany.

From 1946 until 1959, Kretschmer was the director of the psychiatric clinic of the University of Tübingen.

Character Styles

Kretschmer divided personality into two "constitutional groups": Schizothymic, which contain a "Psychaesthetic proportion" between sensitive and cold poles, and Cyclothymic which contain a "Diathetic" proportion between gay and sad. The Schizoids consist of the Hyperesthetic (sensitive) and Anesthetic (Cold) characters, and the Cycloids consist of the Depressive (or "melancholic") and Hypomanic characters.

Works

  • Wahnbildung und manisch-depressiver Symptomenkomplexe, Berlin, (1914, dissertation) (development of delusion and manic-depressive symptom complex)
  • Der sensitive Beziehungswahn, Berlin(1918), 2. Aufl. Berlin (1927), habilitation) (the sensitive relative delusion)
  • Physique and Character (International Library of Psychology) (1931), Routledge, ISBN 0-415-21060-7
  • Medizinische Psychologie, (1922) (medical psychology)
  • Hysteria, Reflex, and Instinct, Leipzig (1923) Greenwood, ISBN 0-8371-5754-4
  • Die Veranlagung zu seelischen Störungen, mit Ferdinand Adalbert Kehrer (1883-1966), Berlin (1924) (the disposition for psychic disturbances)
  • Störungen des Gefühlslebens, Temperamente, Handbuch der Geisteskrankheiten. Band 1. Berlin (1928) (psychic disturbances and temperaments)
  • The Psychology of Men of Genious (International Library of Psychology), Berlin (1929), Routledge, ISBN 0-415-21061-5
  • Das apallische Syndrom, in Ztschr. Neurol. Psychiat, 169,576-579 (1940) (the apallic syndrome)
  • Psychotherapeuthische Studien, Stuttgart (1949) (psychotherapeutic studies)
  • Robert Gaupp zum Gedächtnis, Deutsche medizinische Wochenschrift, Stuttgart (1953) 78: 1713. (in memory of Robert Gaupp)
  • Gestufte Aktivhypnose - Zweigleisige Standardmethode, In: V. E. Frankl, V.v. Gebsattel and J.H. Schultz, Hrsg.: Handbuch der Neurosenlehre und Psychotherapie, Band IV, pp. 130-141. Urban & Schwarzenberg, München-Berlin (1959)
  • Gestalten und Gedanken (1963) (characters and thoughts)

References

  • Ideology and ethics. The perversion of German psychiatrists’ ethics by the ideology of National Socialism. by L. Singer, Eur. Psychiatry 1998
  • Un apercu sur la psychiatrie sociale allemande en 1934. by J. Bieder, Ann. Med. Psychol. 1996
  • Priwitzer, Martin, Ernst Kretschmer und das Wahnproblem, (Ernst Kretschmer and the problem of delusion) Dissertation, 2004
  • Millon, T., Grossman, S., Millon, C., Meagher, S & Ramnath, R. (2004). Personality disorders in modern life (2nd edition). Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Ernst Klee: Das Personenlexikon zum Dritten Reich. Wer war was vor und nach 1945. Fischer Taschenbuch Verlag, Zweite aktualisierte Auflage, Frankfurt am Main 2005, S. 339.


External links


 
 
Learn More
Allgemeine Ärztliche Gesellschaft Für Psychotherapie (psychoanalysis)
Year 1921 (in Science & Technology)
Gisela Pankow (psychoanalysis)

Who is Ernst Mayr? Read answer...
Who is Ernst Abbe? Read answer...
Who was Ernst Roehm? Read answer...

Help us answer these
Who is Ernst Dosch?
Where is an obituarary of Forest Figsby a founder of Ernst and Ernst?
Number of Ernst Young areas?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
World of the Mind. The Oxford Companion to the Mind. Second Edition. Copyright © Oxford University Press, 2004. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Ernst Kretschmer" Read more