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FOURTH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN PSYCHOPATHOLOGICAL ASSOCIATION, WASHINGTON, D. C , MAY 8, 1913 MORNING SESSION The President, Dr. James J. Putnam, in the chair. Dr. Morton Prince, Boston, read a paper entitled "The Psychopathology of a Case of Phobia. A Clinical Study."1 DISCUSSION DR . ALFRED REGINALD ALLEN, Philadelphia: I would like to ask Dr. Prince whether, when his patient was writing in hypnosis, the writing was automatic. Did I understand you to say that she was at that time answering questions that you were asking? DR . PRINCE: Yes: or rather she was narrating free association memories. DR . ALLEN: DO you happen to have notes of those free associations during the writing period? DR . PRINCE: I have not the notes here. Those memories were of early childhood. Some of them dealt with her life at Bar Harbor; with the little secrets of her child-life: how she felt badly about this or that. There was a large number of these memories, many of them unpleasant, and many of them clearly indicated the domi- nance of the instinct of self-abasement. There was nothing tha t I could connect in any way with her phobia. They were
Journal of Abnormal Psychology – American Psychological Association
Published: Dec 1, 1913
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