Johannes Heinrich Schultz

Johannes Heinrich Schultz (June 20th, 1884 with Göttingen; September 19th, 1970 with Berlin) is an inventive German psychiatrist of the autogenic Training.

From 1902 to 1909, Schultz follows studies of medicine to Lausanne, Breslau and Göttingen where it meets Karl Jaspers. It obtains its doctorate in medicine with Göttingen in 1907. In the years 1910, he studies the Hypnose, being interested in particular in work of Korbiniam Brodman and Oskar Vogt. In 1911, it meets Sigmund Freud. In 1913, it returns to the private clinic of Jena directed by Otto Binswanger.

During the First World War, he is army medical officer in Prussia Orientale and meets Karl Abraham. Entitled as psychiatrist in 1919, it directs a psychotherapeutic sanatorium to Dresden of 1920 to 1923 in which Frieda Fromm-Reichmann works.

In 1924, Schultz settles as neurologist and psychotherapist in Berlin.

In 1932, it publishes its most known book, Autogenous Thérapie , in which it publishes its method of the autogenic Training, largely inspired by the techniques of autohypnose of Oskar Vogt.

In 1933 it adheres to the party National Socialist and, of 1936 to 1945, it works within the Institut Göring, also called German Institut of research in psychology and psychotherapy.

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