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Franz Alexander



Franz Gabriel Alexander, MD, (1891–1964) was a Hungarian American psychoanalyst and physician. He is considered one of the founders of psychosomatic medicine and psychoanalytic criminology. Although he studied psychoanalysis under Sigmund Freud, he took his studies further and identified the role that chronic emotional stress plays in causing certain human diseases.

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Franz Alexander and Psychosomatic Medicine

Aside from being one of the most important proponents of psychoanalysis during the 20th century, Franz Alexander helped lay the foundations for psychosomatic medicine.

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The Life and Times of Franz Alexander: From Budapest To California

Ilonka Venier Alexander is a clinical social worker and psychotherapist with 30 years' experience in the field of mental health. She had the opportunity to testify before the United States Congress in the early days of the HIV epidemic about its impact on Boston area veterans.

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H. pylori at Last Gets Its Due

It may sound silly today, but Alexander's general ideas about psychosomatic illnesses survived in the work of another Hungarian emigrant, the endocrinologist Hans Selye.

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Psychosomatic Medicine: Its Principles and Applications

A pioneer in the field of psychoanalysis and psychosomatic medicine describes the fundamental concepts on which the psychosomatic approach is based and presents the results of study concerning the influence of emotions on bodily processes in health and disease. Dr.

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Theories of Psychosomatic Disorders

A short lecture from the Psychosomatics Student Group Riga by Kamiar-K. Rückert. Talking about the different psychodynamic theories of Psychosomatic Medicine.

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Images in Psychiatry: Franz Alexander, 1891–1964

Alexander was a rare psychoanalytic pioneer who, despite a thorough grounding in classical Freudian theory, had the courage, vision, and flexibility to modify his thinking in the light of newer knowledge.

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Sigmund Freud