George Everett Partridge (31 May 1870, Worcester, Massachusetts – November 1953, Baltimore) was an American psychologist credited with popularizing the term sociopath in 1930 that Karl Brinbaum had suggested in 1909. He worked with the influential G. Stanley Hall at Clark University. One year after his death, the George Everett Partridge Memorial Foundation was incorporated in 1954 by the Partridge family to memorialize his life's work in the study and treatment of mental and personality disorders. The Foundation focused on developing programs to promote treatment centers for mentally disabled children, often referred to as the "forgotten children." Partridge schools were established. The first of which was in Herndon, Virginia, for older boys with moderate mental retardation resulting fro
Attributes | Values |
---|
rdf:type
| |
rdfs:label
| - George E. Partridge (en)
- George E. Partridge (fr)
|
rdfs:comment
| - George Everett Partridge (31 May 1870, Worcester, Massachusetts – November 1953, Baltimore) was an American psychologist credited with popularizing the term sociopath in 1930 that Karl Brinbaum had suggested in 1909. He worked with the influential G. Stanley Hall at Clark University. One year after his death, the George Everett Partridge Memorial Foundation was incorporated in 1954 by the Partridge family to memorialize his life's work in the study and treatment of mental and personality disorders. The Foundation focused on developing programs to promote treatment centers for mentally disabled children, often referred to as the "forgotten children." Partridge schools were established. The first of which was in Herndon, Virginia, for older boys with moderate mental retardation resulting fro (en)
- George Everett Partridge, né le 31 mai 1870 à Worcester, Massachusetts et mort en novembre 1953 à Baltimore, Maryland, est un psychologue américain connu pour avoir popularisé le terme « sociopathe ». Il travaille notamment avec le psychologue G. Stanley Hall à l'Université Clark. (fr)
|
name
| - George Everett Partridge (en)
|
dcterms:subject
| |
Wikipage page ID
| |
Wikipage revision ID
| |
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
| |
sameAs
| |
sname
| - George Everett Partridge (en)
|
sopt
| |
dbp:wikiPageUsesTemplate
| |
id
| |
has abstract
| - George Everett Partridge (31 May 1870, Worcester, Massachusetts – November 1953, Baltimore) was an American psychologist credited with popularizing the term sociopath in 1930 that Karl Brinbaum had suggested in 1909. He worked with the influential G. Stanley Hall at Clark University. One year after his death, the George Everett Partridge Memorial Foundation was incorporated in 1954 by the Partridge family to memorialize his life's work in the study and treatment of mental and personality disorders. The Foundation focused on developing programs to promote treatment centers for mentally disabled children, often referred to as the "forgotten children." Partridge schools were established. The first of which was in Herndon, Virginia, for older boys with moderate mental retardation resulting from brain damage. However, the foundation was forfeited in 1991. (en)
- George Everett Partridge, né le 31 mai 1870 à Worcester, Massachusetts et mort en novembre 1953 à Baltimore, Maryland, est un psychologue américain connu pour avoir popularisé le terme « sociopathe ». Il travaille notamment avec le psychologue G. Stanley Hall à l'Université Clark. Un an après sa mort, la George Everett Partridge Memorial Foundation est constituée (1954) par la famille Partridge afin de commémorer le travail de sa vie dans l'étude et le traitement des troubles mentaux et de la personnalité. La Fondation se concentre sur le développement de programmes visant à créer et soutenir des centres de traitement pour les enfants handicapés mentaux, parfois appelés « enfants oubliés ». (fr)
|
gold:hypernym
| |
schema:sameAs
| |
prov:wasDerivedFrom
| |
page length (characters) of wiki page
| |
foaf:isPrimaryTopicOf
| |
is Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
of | |
is foaf:primaryTopic
of | |