Jung began his career as a psychiatrist in 1900, when he was 25, as an
assistant working under Dr. Eugen Bleuler at the Burgholzli Hospital in
Zurich. In 1906, after he had become senior staff physician and before
his first meeting with Freud in Vienna in 1907, Jung wrote his famous
monograph "On the Psychology of Dementia Praecox." Ernest Jones
described it as "a book that made history in psychiatry and extended
many of Freud's ideas into the realm of the psychoses proper." A. A.
Brill (whose introduction to his 1936 translation is included here) has
called this work indispensable for every student of psychiatry--"the
work which firmly established Jung as a pioneer and scientific
contributor to psychiatry."
Originally published in 1974.
The Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand
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Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.