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Ernst Rudin : ウィキペディア英語版
Ernst Rüdin

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Ernst Rüdin (April 19, 1874, St. Gallen – October 22, 1952) was a Swiss-born German psychiatrist, geneticist, eugenicist and Nazi. Rising to prominence under Emil Kraepelin and assuming his directorship at what is now called the Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry in Munich, he has long been scientifically honoured and cited internationally as the pioneer of psychiatric inheritance studies. He also argued for, designed, justified and funded the mass sterilization and clinical killing of adults and children.
== Early career ==

Commencing in 1893 Rudin studied medicine at universities in several countries, graduating in 1898. In Zurich he worked as assistant to Eugene Bleuler who coined the term 'schizophrenia'. He completed his PhD, then a psychiatric residency at a Berlin prison. From 1907 he worked at the University of Munich as assistant to Emil Kraepelin, the highly influential psychiatrist who had developed the diagnostic split between 'dementia praecox' ('early dementia' - reflecting his pessimistic prognosis - renamed schizophrenia) and 'manic-depressive illness' (including unipolar depression), and who is considered by many to be the father of modern psychiatric classification.〔(Abnormal Psychology and Life: A Dimensional Approach ) Chris Kearney, Timothy Trull. Cengage Learning, 2014〕 Rudin became senior lecturer in 1909 as well as senior physician at the Munich Psychiatric Hospital, succeeding Alois Alzheimer.〔
Kraepelin and Rudin were both ardent advocates of a theory that the German race was becoming overly 'domesticated' and thus degenerating into higher rates of mental illness and other conditions.〔 Fears of degeneration were somewhat common internationally at the time, but the extent to which Rudin took them may have been unique, and from the very beginning of his career he made continuous efforts to have his research translate into political action. He also repeatedly drew attention to the financial burden of the sick and disabled.〔
Rüdin developed the concept of "empirical genetic prognosis" of mental disorders. He published influential initial results on the genetics of schizophrenia in 1916. Rudin's data did not show a high enough risk in siblings for schizophrenia to be due to a simple recessive gene as he and Kraepelin thought, but he put forward a two-recessive-gene theory to try to account for this.〔(Schizophrenia ) Irving I. Gottesman, CUP Archive, 30 Jun 1982〕 This has been attributed to a "mistaken belief" that just one or a small number of gene variations caused such conditions.〔 Nevertheless, Rudin pioneered and refined complex techniques for conducting studies of inheritance, was widely cited in the international literature for decades, and is still regarded as "the father of psychiatric genetics".〔(Models of Madness: Psychological, Social and Biological Approaches to Psychosis ) 2013. Eds. John Read, Jacqui Dillon. Pg 35. Citing Steeman (2005) & Straus (2006)〕
Rudin was influenced by his then brother-in-law, and long-time friend and colleague, Alfred Ploetz, who was considered the 'father' of racial hygiene and indeed had coined the term in 1895.〔 This was a form of eugenics, inspired by social darwinism, which had gained some popularity internationally, as would the voluntary or compulsory sterilization of psychiatric patients, initially in America. Rudin campaigned for this early on. At a conference on alcoholism in 1903, he argued for the sterilisation of 'incurable alcoholics', but his proposal was roundly defeated.〔(Racial Hygiene: Medicine Under the Nazis ), 1988, by Robert Proctor. Pg 96-97〕 In 1904 he was appointed co-editor in chief of the newly founded Archive for Racial Hygiene and Social Biology, and in 1905 was among the co-founders of the German Society for Racial Hygiene (which soon became International), along with Ploetz.〔(Who's Who in Nazi Germany ) Robert S. Wistrich, Routledge, 4 Jul 2013〕 He published an article of his own in Archives in 1910, in which he argued that medical care for the mentally ill, alcoholics, epileptics and others was a distortion of natural laws of natural selection, and medicine should help to clean the genetic pool.

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