It is the prolonged departure, without an adequate external cause, from the state of feeling and modes of thinking usual to the individual when in health, that is the true feature of disorder in mind... The Law Times - Página 1481858Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Ohio. Courts - 1906 - 732 páginas
...Bouvier's Law Die. (18771, 716, defines msauity to be "the prolonged departure without any adequate cause, from the state of feeling and modes of thinking usual to the individual in health." Church and Peterson define insanity as a "manifestation in language or conduct of disease... | |
| James Schouler - 1910 - 760 páginas
...constitutes the presence of insanity. "It is the prolonged departure, without an adequate external rause, from the state of feeling and modes of thinking usual...health, that is the true feature of disorder of mind." Mudway v. Croft, ib. 1 Merrill v. Rolston, 5 Redf. 220, 251; Florey v. Florey, 24 Ala. 241. 147. Delusions... | |
| William Morris Butler - 1910 - 534 páginas
...(Brower-Bannister). "Insanity is a prolonged departure, without an adequate external cause, from the states of feeling and modes of thinking usual to the individual when in health. This is the true feature of disorder in mind" (Andrew Combe). In a general way, insanity may be defined... | |
| William Morris Butler - 1910 - 548 páginas
...Brower-Bannister). "Insanity is a prolonged departure, without an adequate external cause, from the states of feeling and modes of thinking usual to the individual when in health. This is the true feature of disorder in mind" (Andrew Combe). In a general way, insanity may be defined... | |
| John Bouvier - 1914 - 1124 páginas
...medical authority, that It la the prolonged departure, without any adequate cause, from the states of feeling and modes of thinking usual to the Individual when In health, which Is the essential feature of Insanity. Gooch, Lond. Quart. Rev. xliil. 355; Combe, Ment. Derang.... | |
| 1873 - 614 páginas
...subserve," and he adds, "it is the prolonged departure, without any adequate external cause, from the states of feeling and modes of thinking usual to the individual...in health ; that is the true feature of disorder of the mind." Dr. Maudsley says, " The ground which medical men should firmly take in regard to insanity... | |
| 1872 - 628 páginas
...(Beck, I., p. 729). Dr. Combe says, in similar terms, " it is the prolonged departure, without any adequate external cause, from the state of feeling...in health, that is the true feature of disorder of the mind. The existence of insanity in any form is not always proved by the presence of any particular... | |
| John Romain Rood - 1926 - 1154 páginas
...which might have induced the peculiar act, belief, or desire. It is the prolonged departure, without adequate external cause, from the state of feeling...individual when in health, that is the true feature of a disordered mind. Mb Has he who was refined, mild, kind, and affectionate, become vulgar, scurrilous,... | |
| Hugo Tristram Engelhardt (Jr.), S.F. Spicker - 1978 - 334 páginas
...persons from making such wills. Quoting from a work by Andrew Combe, Isaac Ray defines insanity as 'the prolonged departure, without an adequate external...of thinking usual to the individual when in health . . .' ([18], p. 111). Ray, unlike Rush and Beck, uses the word 'health' and we expect Ray to tell... | |
| Roy Porter, Helen Nicholson, Bridget Bennett - 2003 - 376 páginas
...the law is nothing less than the prolonged departure without 334 an adequate external cause from tlie state of feeling and modes of thinking usual to the individual when in health. C. — The burthen of proof of insanity lies on those persona asserting its existence. D. — Control... | |
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