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  1. Karl Bonhoeffer, before 1938. Karl Bonhoeffer (German: [kaʁl ˈbɔnˌhøːfɐ] ⓘ; March 31, 1868 – December 4, 1948) was a German neurologist, psychiatrist and physician.

  2. Karl Ludwig Bonhoeffer war ein deutscher Psychiater und Neurologe, Geheimer Medizinalrat, Ordinarius für Psychiatrie und Neurologie an der Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Berlin, Direktor der Klinik für psychische und Nervenkrankheiten der Charité in Berlin. Karl Bonhoeffer verlor seine Söhne Dietrich Bonhoeffer und Klaus ...

  3. 1 de mai. de 2008 · Karl Bonhoeffer’s description and classification of symptomatic psychoses (acute exogenous reaction type) in 1908 profoundly enhanced the distinction between exogenous and endogenous psychoses . He emphasized the symptom of impaired consciousness, which in his view characterized exogenous psychoses such as delirium.

    • Andreas Ströhle, Jana Wrase, Henry Malach, Christof Gestrich, Andreas Heinz
    • 2008
  4. Karl Bonhoeffer was born in 1868 in Neresheim, Württem-berg (southern Germany) and studied medicine in Tübingen, Berlin, and Munich. In 1904, he was elected chair of the Depart-ment of Psychiatry at the University of Breslau/Wroclaw Mental Hospital, where he worked together with Carl Wernicke (1848– 1905), known for his research on aphasia.

  5. Karl Bonhoeffer, student of Carl Wernicke, is known as one of the outstanding psychiatrists and neurologists. His name stands for the description of the choreatic movements (Bindearm-Chorea) as well as for the symptomatic psychosis (organic psychosis).

    • Klaus-Jürgen Neumärker
    • 2007
  6. With the description and classification of Symptomatic psychoses in 1908, Karl Bonhoeffer laid the foundation for a categorization into exogenous and endogenous psychoses. This opened new pathogenic and psychopathologic horizons in connection with the aetiology of psychoses, as was particularly exem ….

  7. In 1949, after the creation of the Max Planck Society, the physicochemist Karl Friedrich Bonhoeffer re-established the Berlin institute as the Max Planck Institute for Physical Chemistry in Göttingen.