Daniel Paul Schreber

See also: Schreber

Daniel Paul Schreber , born the July 25th 1842 with Leipzig and deceased the April 14th 1911 was a magistrate.

He is the author of “Memories of a neuropath” , a traditional autobiographical work of the psychiatry, to which Sigmund Freud devoted a study in “Five psychoanalyzes” under the title “Remarks psychoanalytical on the autobiography of a case of paranoia: President Schreber” .

Biographical reference marks

Wire of Daniel Gottlob Moritz Schreber, a famous doctor, Daniel Paul is the third of a phratry of five children.

He successfully undertakes a career in the magistrature. In 1884, after a failure with the elections with the German National Assembly (Reichtag), it crosses a hypochondriac episode , with attempt at Suicide.

In October 1893, it is named President de Chambre at the Court of Appeal of Dresden. Victim of Insomnia S which it initially allots to an overwork, it is quickly constrained to enter in private hospital. A few months later, in prey with many hallucinations, it is suspended of its functions, put under supervision and is placed in a private clinic specialized for mentally ills.

In 1900, after a lawsuit, it obtains to be able to leave asylum freely and to publish its memories entitled Mémoires of a neuropath , which expose in detail the forms of sound is delirious.

Freud, after others, is interested there. Lacan followed this example, by rejecting certain assumptions of Freud. Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari spoke about it in the Anti-Oedipus , presenting it like a model of deterritorialized.

Is delirious of Schreber articulates itself around a complex system of relations of the beings with God; this one is supposed capacity to constantly examine “nerves” of the individuals, métonymies of the human being. Schreber is persuaded that it is persecuted because its own nerves attract God.

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