Dear H-Madness readers,
You may be interested in the recently published article Laennec and the Vesanias: A Crossroad of Medicine, Philosophy, and Modern Psychiatry, by Emmanuel Drouin, which appeared in the journal History of Psychiatry. Below is the abstract of the article.
“This article revisits a little-known lecture by René-Théophile-Hyacinthe Laennec (1781–1826), best known as the inventor of the stethoscope, focusing instead on his reflections on mental illness—what he termed vesanias. Delivered at the Collège de France in 1823, the lecture predates modern psychiatry and offers a rare, nuanced view of mental disorders at the crossroads of clinical medicine, philosophy, and Enlightenment moral thought. Laennec distinguishes between five types of mental illness—hallucinations, monomania, mania, dementia, and idiocy—while rejecting the reductionist views of his contemporaries who sought anatomical lesions as the sole cause. His classification emphasizes gradation, subjective experience, and the blending of pathology with normal human faculties such as imagination, emotion, and belief. He critiques the dominant anatomical paradigm, notably the views of Broussais, and advocates for a moral and observational approach to mental care. His views prefigure modern biopsychosocial models and anticipate concepts such as shared psychosis and dimensional spectra in psychiatry. By refusing to isolate madness from social, cultural, or historical contexts, Laennec offers a deeply human and still-relevant vision of mental illness—one that challenges us to rethink psychiatry beyond biological determinism and diagnostic rigidity”.