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Am J Psychiatry 161:2185, December 2004
© 2004 American Psychiatric Association


Images in Psychiatry

Benedict-Augustin Morel (1809–1873)

Ernest L. Abel, Ph.D.


Benedict-Augustin Morel

Benedict-Augustin Morel’s theory of degeneration dominated French psychiatry for almost a century after its publication in 1857 (1) because it provided psychiatry with a convincing biological explanation about how abnormal mental conditions were acquired.

Combining concepts of acquired traits becoming fixed in germ plasm, drug toxicity, and hereditary transmission, Morel described a progressive generational degeneration starting with neurosis in the first generation, mental alienation in the next, and imbecility in the third, culminating in sterility in the fourth and final generation. What was being passed on was not a specific pathology but a susceptibility of the nervous system to disturbances originating from "overindulgence" of toxic substances such as alcohol.

Morel’s theory provided a parsimonious explanation for the etiology of insanity and social deviance (2) and generated research programs to demonstrate how paternal drinking affected progeny (3) and created the background for eugenics programs to improve humans through sterilization of those considered inferior (4).

Footnotes

Address reprint requests to Dr. Abel, Departments of Obstetrics and Gynecology and Psychology, Wayne State University, 275 E. Hancock, Detroit, MI 48201; eabel{at}wayne.edu (e-mail). Image copyright 1954, by F.A. Davis.

References

  1. Morel BA: Traité des Degenerescences Physiques, Intellectuelles et Morales de l’espece Humaine. Paris, Masson, 1857
  2. Lombroso C: Crime, Its Causes and Remedies. Boston, Little, Brown, 1918
  3. Abel EL: Fetal Alcohol Syndrome. New York, Plenum, 1984
  4. Pick D: Faces of Degeneration. New York, Cambridge University Press, 1989

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