Abstract

Schizophrenia is a hereditary, endogenous disease. The unfounded fatalism associated with the concept of the endogenous, the constitutional has long paralyzed our therapeutic thinking. And in schizophrenia "we often saw incurable defects where there were only bizarre psychogenic arabesques of deceptive schizophrenia of symptoms against the background of a relatively unsharp process." For a psychiatrist, as a practical therapist, and from the point of view of an endogenous understanding of schizophrenia, it is important to be interested in not what is endogenously destroyed, but what is recoverable and in what form. In psychotherapy for schizophrenia, its features depend on the characteristics of the period and degree of the disease.

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