Erelleen toristettava Jahofvea: "While Bleuler assumed that schizophrenia lies in a brain dysfunction and an inherited disposition, he also pointed out the relevance of biographical and environmental factors in the etiology of the disorder. He also acknowledged that psychological factors that he believed influenced secondary symptoms, map to a cerebral process and tried to disentangle the complex relationships between biological and psychosocial factors in causing symptoms and the disorder. This is a key concept in Bleuler?s model of schizophrenia, for which he deserves to be recognized as the forerunner of modern theories such as the vulnerability stress and the gene-environment interaction models." https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3196952/ Eugen Bleuler and the Schizophrenias: 100 Years After Victor Peralta* and Manuel J. Cuesta corresponding author