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Review article

Six decades of the Pula neuropsychiatric meetings - from neuropsychiatry to borderlands of neurology and psychiatry: brain and mind

Boško Barac orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-0139-8116 ; Academy of Medical Sciences of Croatia, Zagreb, Croatia
Vida Demarin orcid id orcid.org/0000-0003-4942-259X ; Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Zagreb, Croatia


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Abstract

In 2010, the International Neuropsychiatric Pula Symposia, from 2005 Congresses (INPS/INPC), founded in 1961 by Zagreb and Graz University Neuropsychiatry Departments, celebrated their 50th anniversary of successful development. The co-author of the paper, Boško Barac, witnessed their growth from 1966, collaborating in their organization from 1974 with the first Secretary General Gerald Grinschgl; elected for his successor after his unexpected death in 1985, he was leading the Kuratorium (Scientific Board) as Secretary General for 23 years, collaborating in this period with his Austrian partner and friend Helmut Lechner. In 2007, Barac handed over this
responsible function to the co-author Vida Demarin. Starting when neuropsychiatry was a unique discipline, the INPC followed the processes of emancipation of neurology and psychiatry and their
evolution to independent disciplines with new subspecialties. These respectable conferences greatly surpassed the significance of the two disciplines, neurology and psychiatry, granting collaboration of borderland medical and non-medical disciplines, connecting experts from the region, European countries and the world. Inaugurated in ‘cold-war’ times, in their first phase they enabled to make professional and human contacts between scientists from the two divided ‘blocs’ thanks to the ‘non-aligned’ position of the then Yugoslavia, fostering the ideas of mutual understanding and
collaboration. On the other hand, the scientific development of the meetings took in the center of their study fields connecting the two disciplines, giving a quite unique quality to these meetings. For many years, the meetings cherished specific neurologic and psychiatric topics, at the same time planning increasing important topics of the ‘borderland areas’ in their programs. For the important achievements, they earned the title of the Pula School of Science and Humanism, promoting interdisciplinary scientific collaboration important for humanistic goals of medicine. Medicine, as science and practice, although founded on biological grounds, is primarily a human activity serving to individual man and the whole human race. Modern neurology and psychiatry are no longer restricted to diagnosing and curing brain and nerves or psychiatric disorders, and are nowadays important as a science of human mind and discipline caring about the human brain, the complex organ of each individual man, collective human consciousness and our mental life. Such atmosphere contributed to the fall of the totalitarian, narrow-minded political, ideological or nationalistic thinking, aiming to tolerance and humane democratic developments in the united Europe and the preparation for
peaceful living of various nations, races, religions and viewpoints in the 21st century.

Keywords

Neuropsychiatry – history; Croatia; Neurology; Psychiatry; Neurosurgery; Neuropsychology

Hrčak ID:

155657

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/155657

Publication date:

1.12.2015.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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