Albert Moll

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Albert Moll (18621939) was a German psychiatrist and, together with Iwan Bloch and Magnus Hirschfeld, the founder of modern sexology. Moll believed sexual nature involved two entirely distinct parts: sexual stimulation and sexual attraction.

Contents

[edit] Sexual theories

Moll divided the sexual response into four phases[1]:

  1. The onset,
  2. the equable voluptuous sensation,
  3. the voluptuous acme,
  4. the sudden diminution and cessation of the voluptuous sensation

[edit] Mysticism

Moll was a firm beliver in hypnotism[2], but not mysticism. He frequently indulged in the unmasking of mediums and séances.[3]

[edit] References

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Moll, Albert (1912) The Sexual life of the Child Macmillan, New York, (pp. 22–23) (original in German 1908)
  2. ^ Moll, Albert (1889) Der Hypnotismus Kornfeld, Berlin;
  3. ^ Moll, Albert (1902) Christian science, medicine, and occultism (translated by F.J. Rebman) Rebman Ltd, London;