Karl Wilhelm Ideler

Karl Wilhelm Ideler (October 25, 1795 - July 29, 1860) was a German psychiatrist who was a native of Bentwisch. In 1820 he earned his doctorate from the Friedrich Wilhelm Institute in Berlin, and spent the next several years as a general practitioner in the cities of Bernau, Rathenow and Genthin. In 1828 he returned to Berlin as head of the department for mental illness at the Charité. In 1840 he became a full professor and director of the psychiatric clinic. From 1839 until his death in 1860 he was a lecturer at the University of Berlin. His uncle was noted astronomer Christian Ludwig Ideler (1766-1846).

Ideler was one of the more important figures regarding German psychiatric thought during the first half of the 19th century. This era is often described as the German "romantic" school of psychiatry. In his numerous publications, Ideler theorized on issues such as mind-body correlations, religious mania and religious confusion. Ideler created complex theories concerning the relationship between illnesses of the mind and the state of the physical body.

During this period of time, conditions at the Charité for mentally ill patients were often considered barbaric and inhumane. Ideler, not averse to punitive measures, made little effort to change these conditions. Later, Wilhelm Griesinger (1817-1868) would advocate significant changes regarding humane and dignified treatment of the mentally ill at the Charité. Although Ideler is often portrayed as a product of an unenlightened era in psychiatric thought, he had several ideas that are consistent with modern psychoanalysis. He stressed the importance of the emotional life, and believed that unfulfilled passions could be a source of mental disturbance. He considered passion to be a form of mental disturbance, and that the physician needed to analyze the passion that provoked the mental imbalance.

Selected Writings

 * Anthropologie für Ärzte (Anthropology for physicians) (1827)
 * Grundriss der Seelenheilkunde (Sketch of the soul medicine) (1835)
 * Die Geisteskrankheiten in Beziehung zur Rechtspflege (The mental disorders in relationship with justice) (1844)
 * Der religiöse Wahnsinn, erläutert durch Krankengeschichten. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der religiösen Wirren der Gegenwart (Religious insanity, description of patient stories. A contribution for the history of religious confusion of the present) (1847)
 * Aversuch einer Theorie des religiösen Wahnsinns: ein Beitrag zur Kritik der religiösen Wirren der Gegenwart (Attempt of a theory of the religious insanity: a contribution for the criticism of religious confusion of the present)
 * 1. Teil: Die Erscheinungen des religiösen Wahnsinns (The features of religious insanity) (1848)
 * 2. Die Entwickelung des religiösen Wahnsinns (1850) (The development of religious insanity) (1850)