- Paul Sérieux
Paul Sérieux (1864-1947) was a French
psychiatrist who was a native ofParis . He practiced medicine in several French hospitals and asylums during his career, including the Asylum of Ville-Evrard and the hospital of Sainte-Anne. He also worked as a physician at the Asylum ofMarsens in Switzerland.Sérieux is best known for research of psychoses and
delusion al thought processes, and his collaborative work withJoseph Capgras (1873-1950). With Capgras, he described a type of non-schizophrenic, paranoid psychosis called "délire d’interprétation", which is defined as a "chronic interpretive psychosis". Sérieux was also instrumental in introducing the theories of German psychiatristEmil Kraepelin (1856-1926) into French psychiatry.With his one-time mentor
Valentin Magnan (1835-1916), he co-authored the book "Délire chronique" (Chronic delusion), and in 1909 with Capgras, he published a treatise called "Les folies raisonnantes" (Reasoning madnesses). Sérieux also travelled throughout Europe, and created an extensive report concerning the state and conditions of psychiatric treatment in French, German, Swiss and Belgian mental asylums.References
* "This article is based on a translation of an article from the French Wikipedia."
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