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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Otto_GrossOtto Gross - Wikipedia

    Otto Hans Adolf Gross (17 March 1877 – 13 February 1920) was an Austrian psychoanalyst. A maverick early disciple of Sigmund Freud, he later became an anarchist and joined the utopian Ascona community . His father Hans Gross was a judge turned pioneering criminologist.

  2. www.therapyroute.com › article › who-was-otto-gross-by-b-nitzschkeWho was Otto Gross? - TherapyRoute

    Jan 5, 2021 · As a qualified psychiatrist in the field of psychopathology (he had graduated in 1905), he diagnosed the two women as suffering from incurable mental illness (dementia praecox). Accordingly, he left the ‘poison’ with which Lotte Hattemer killed herself lying within her reach. ‘I declare my support for euthanasia,’ commented Gross.

  3. Otto Hans Adolf Gross war ein österreichischer Mediziner, Psychiater, Psychoanalytiker und Revolutionär.

  4. Biographical Survey 1. by Gottfried Heuer. In telling the story of Gross' known life, Hurwitz' (1979) and Green's (1974, 1986, 1998) works have been most valuable. Otto Hans Adolf Gross (also Grob) was born 17 March 1877 in Gniebing near Feldbach in Styria, Austria.

  5. Otto Gross was the first analyst to link his work with radical politics, connecting inner, personal transformation with outer, collective change. Since his death in 1920 his work has been suppressed, despite his seminal influence on the developing analytic discipline and on the fields of sociology, philosophy and literature.

  6. Jan 27, 2010 · The paper focuses on three different themes to demonstrate the continuing relevance of the early psychoanalyst, Otto Gross (1877–1920), which reverberates through a number of disciplines.

  7. Otto Gross was one of the most famous - and controversial - Freudian analysts of the first decade of the 20th century. Highly praised by Freud and also a patient and friend of C. G. Jung, he was...

  8. Otto Gross, a neurologist and psychoanalyst, was born March 17, 1877, in Feldbach , Austria, and died February 13, 1920, in Berlin. His father, Hans Gross, was a celebrated professor of criminal law and his mother Ad è le came from a middle-class family.

  9. Jun 27, 2024 · For more than half a century, Otto Gross (1877–1920) was a forgotten figure in the annals of mental medicine and intellectual culture.

  10. Otto Gross was one of the most famous Freudian analysts of the first decade of the 20th century. He was rejected from the movement because he wanted to adapt psychoanalysis to function as a philosophy of revolution.