Name Johannes Schultz | Books Autogenic Training | |
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Died September 19, 1970, Berlin, Germany |
Entrenamiento autógeno de Schultz 2
Johannes Heinrich Schultz (June 20, 1884 – September 19, 1970) was a German psychiatrist and an independent psychotherapist. Schultz became world famous for the development of a system of self-hypnosis called autogenic training.
Contents
Entrenamiento autógeno de Schultz 1
Life
He studied medicine in Lausanne, Gottingen (where he met Karl Jaspers) and Breslau. He earned his doctorate from Gottingen in 1907. After receiving his medical license in 1908, he practiced at the polyclinic at the Medical University Clinic at Gottingen until 1911. Afterwards he worked at the Paul-Ehrlich Institute in Frankfurt, at the insane asylum at Chemnitz and finally at the Psychiatric University Clinic at Jena under Otto Binswanger, where he earned his habilitation in 1915.
During the First World War, he served as director of a sanitorium in Belgium. In 1919 he became a professor of Psychiatry and Neuropathology at Jena. In 1920 he became Chief Doctor and scientific leader at Dr. Heinrich Lahmann's sanatorium Weisser Hirsch in Dresden. In 1924, he established himself as a psychiatrist in Berlin.
From 1925-26 he was a member of the founding committee for the first General Doctors' Congress for Psychotherapy, board member of the General Medical Society for Psychotherapy (established in 1927). From 1928 he advised the organization's newsletter, and after 1930 he co-edited (with Arthur Kronfeld and Rudolf Allers) the journal, now named the Zentralblatt fur Psychotherapie. In 1933 he became a board member of the renamed German Medical Society for Psychotherapy under Matthias Heinrich Goring and from 1936 under this vice-director a board member of the German Institute for Psychological Research and Psychotherapy (Deutsches Institut fur psychologische Forschung und Psychotherapie) as well as director of the polyclinic.
From 1933 Schultz wrote a relationship guidebook. There he propagated the "extermination" of handicapped people ("Action T4") and persecution of homosexual men was part of his activity at the Goring Institute. Schultz believed that homosexuality was hereditary and curable. On the one hand the institute tried to cure homosexuals, while on the other Schultz led a commission that compelled those suspected of homosexuality to have intercourse with female prostitutes. The "guilty" were transported to concentration camps.
In 1956, he became editor of the journal Psychotherapie, and in 1959 founder of the German Society for Medical Hypnosis (Deutschen Gesellschaft fur arztliche Hypnose).
His most famous achievement was the development of autogenic training, that was based on the hypnosis research and self-experimentation. It was first publicly put forward in 1926 as "autogenic organ exercises," and received its current name in 1928. The program uses daily practice sessions of visualizations that are designed to help the practitioner achieve deep relaxation.