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The Fourteenth Maudsley Lecture: British Influences in Psychiatry and Mental Hygiene

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2018

Adolf Meyer*
Affiliation:
Phipps Psychiatric Clinic, Baltimore

Extract

It was with a deep sense of responsibility and of gratitude alike that I accepted the invitation to address you as your fourteenth Maudsley Lecturer; a sense of responsibility through the thought that, in a way, I come as a representative of American psychiatry; a sense of sincere gratitude for an opportunity to acknowledge a real personal indebtedness to British science and British medicine and British psychiatry, partly for what I received myself in the long years since my early post-graduate work in this country forty-three years ago, and partly for the influence British thought and work and practice has had upon certain developments, for which it is a pleasure to express our indebtedness and appreciation. Some of these relations and connections are little realized and little appreciated, and yet very illuminating and by no means only personal.

Type
Part I—Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1933 

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