Jules Séglas


Jules Séglas was a French psychiatrist who practiced medicine at the Bicêtre and Salpêtrière Hospitals in Paris.
Early in his career, he was an assistant to famed neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot. Séglas' ideas and theories influenced a number of psychiatrists, including Henri Ey and Jacques Lacan. In 1908 he became president of the Societé Medico-Psychologique.
In the field of psychopathology he conducted studies of delusions, hallucinations and pseudohallucinations, providing a detailed nosology of these phenomena. He did extensive research of language and its relationship to mental illness. Here, he described linguistic traits such as logorrhea, embolalia, near-mutism, automatic speech, alexia, agraphia, et al.; and how these behaviors take shape and interact in various psychiatric disorders.

Selected writings

L’hallucination dans ses rapports avec la fonction du langage, Progrès médical, 1888.Des Troubles du langage chez les Aliénés, Rueff Editeurs, Paris, 1892.Leçons cliniques sur les maladies mentales et nerveuses , Asselin et Houzeau, Paris, 1895Le délire de négations, in Du délire des négations aux idées d'énormité, Jules Cotard & autres, L'Harmattan.Sémiologie des affections mentales, Chap. IV, Book I, 74-270, in Gilbert Ballet's Traité de pathologie mentale.