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Alfred
Adler 1870-1937
Alfred
Adler was born in Vienna Austria as the second of six
children. Much of his career was molded from childhood
experiences, particularly an incident when he was only five
years old. Diagnosed with pneumonia, Adler overheard his
physician tell his father that he doubted Alfred would recover
from his illness. At that moment, Adler decided that if
he survived he would become a doctor and focus on fighting
deadly diseases. By 1895, after surviving pneumonia, he
did just that, and received his medical degree from the
University of Vienna.
By
1898, he had written his first book focusing on approaching
human beings and illness from the view of the whole person
rather than breaking it down into symptoms, instincts, or
drives. In 1902, being one of the few professionals to
praise the writings of Sigmund Freud, he received a hand
written note from Freud asking him to join a weekly discussion
group on psychopathology. He
did so, but soon realized his view of human nature differed
from Freud's, particularly Freud's theory of sexual drives and
the sexual overtones of dream interpretation. Adler left
the group in 1911, along with eight colleagues, and formed his
own school, never seeing Sigmund Freud again. He
wrote several other books over the next twenty years, traveled
abroad bringing with him the idea of child guidance clinics
that he originally founded in Vienna. He lectured at
Columbia University in 1926 and from 1932 until 1937, Adler
lived in the United States during the academic year teaching
at Long Island College of Medicine. On May 28, 1937,
Adler collapsed of a sudden heart attack and died almost
instantly.
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