Ernst Kretschmer


Ernst Kretschmer was a German psychiatrist who researched the human constitution and established a typology.

Life

Kretschmer was born in Wüstenrot near Heilbronn. He attended Cannstatt Gymnasium, one of the oldest Latin schools in Stuttgart area. From 1906 to 1912 he studied theology, medicine, and philosophy at the universities of Tübingen, Munich and Hamburg. From 1913 he was assistant of Robert Gaupp in Tübingen, where he received his habilitation in 1918. He continued as assistant medical director until 1926.
In 1926 he became the director of the psychiatric clinic at Marburg University.
Kretschmer was a founding member of the International General Medical Society for Psychotherapy which was founded on January 12, 1927. He was the president of AÄGP from 1929. In 1933 he resigned from the AÄGP for political reasons.
From 1946 until 1959, Kretschmer was the director of the psychiatric clinic of the University of Tübingen. He died, aged 75, in Tübingen.

Cooperating with the Nazis

After he resigned from the AÄGP, he started to support the SS and signed the "Vow of allegiance of the professors of the German universities and high-schools to Adolf Hitler and the National Socialistic state.".

Scientific contribution

Persistent vegetative state and sensitive paranoia research

Kretschmer was the first to describe the persistent vegetative state which has also been called Kretschmer's syndrome. Another medical term coined after him is Kretschmer’s sensitive paranoia. This classification has the merit of singling out "a type of paranoia that was unknown" prior to Kretschmer, and which "does not resemble the stereotypical image of sthenic paranoia". Furthermore, between 1915 and 1921 he developed a differential diagnosis between schizophrenia and manic depression.

Types of physique

Kretschmer is also known for developing a classification system that can be seen as one of the earliest exponents of a constitutional approach. His classification system was based on four main body types:
The concept of two great psychopathological types of manic-depressive or 'circular' insanity and dementia praecox was developed by Emil Kraepelin.
Each of these body types was associated by Kretschmer with certain personality traits and, in a more extreme form, mental disorders. He wrote that there is only a weak relation between Schizophrenics and pyknic body type on the one hand, and between Circulars and asthenics, athletics, and dysplastics on the other. Among the schizophrenics also the asthenico–athletic types are very prevalent. Kretschmer believed that pyknic persons were friendly, interpersonally dependent, and gregarious. In a more extreme version of these traits, this would mean for example that the obese are predisposed toward manic-depressive illness. Thin types were associated with introversion and timidity. This was seen as a milder form of the negative symptoms exhibited by withdrawn schizophrenics. However, the idea of the association of body types with personality traits is no longer influential in personality psychology.

Asthenic type

The essential characteristic of the asthenic type, in Kretschmer's words, "a deficiency in thickness combined with an average unlessened length". The deficiency is present in all parts of body: muscle, bone, neck, face, trunk, extremities, and in all the tissues skin. The average weight as well as the other body measurements are below the general value for males.
We have, consequently, in the clearest cases a lean narrowly-built man: with narrow shoulders, with thin muscles, delicately boned hands, with a narrow, long, flat chest, on which we can usually see the ribs.
The asthenic female are not only thin, but also of very small height. In their general appearance they're the same as asthenic men.

Athletic type

The male athletic type is characterized by the strong development of the musculature, skeleton, and also the skin.
We have, therefore, in the clearest cases the following general impression: a man with a middle-sized to tall man, with a superb chest, wide projecting shoulders, firm stomach, magnificent legs. The expression "hypertrophied" meaning a development which oversteps the average, not in the sense of a pathological disturbance.
The athletic type among female corresponds to the male form. The certain characteristic deviation is the development of fat, it's rich, but not electively abnormal as with pyknics. Besides of these athletic type women with feminine rounded figure, there are also those women which have outstanding musculature in body face and face. In many cases, athletic type women are actually masculine in muscle relief.
. A frontal portrait.

Pyknic type

The pyknic type is characterized by the peripheral development of the body cavities, and a tendency to a distribution of fat about the torso. They also have a more graceful construction of the motor apparatus.
The characteristics of the well-developed cases: rounded figure, middle height, a soft broad face on a short massive neck, sitting between the shoulders, shoulders are not broad; soft, rounded, and displaying little muscle relief limbs, the hands soft, rather wide and short.
The pyknic type tend emphatically to a covering of fat. The obesity of the pyknic is restricted within moderate limits for the most part. The female pyknics covering of fat is more strongly concentrated over the hips and chest.
The ratio of chest to shoulder of the female pyknics is the same as in the male pyknics.

Distribution of the body types among the schizophrenics and circulars

The temperaments

Kretschmer divided the temperaments into the two "constitutional groups": schizothymic, which contain a "psychæsthetic proportion" between sensitive and cold poles, and cyclothymes which contain a "diathetic" proportion between raised and sad. The modern term for light version of 'circular' insanity is cyclothymia. Psychic tempo of schizothymic people is between unstable and tenacious and they have alternation mode of feeling and thought, and cyclothymes psychic tempo is between mobile and comfortable. Schizothymic's psychomotility is often inadequate to stimulus: inhibited, restrained, lamed, stiff, etc., and psychomotility of cyclothymes is adequate to stimulus and natural. Cyclothymes are often pyknics, schizothymes – athletic, asthenic, dysplastic, and their mixtures.
The Schizoids consist of the hyperæsthetic and anæsthetic characters.

Works