Silas L. Warner
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Silas L. Warner entered Princeton University from Choate in June, 1942, and graduated in 1945 after his first year at Northwestern Medical School. As a student he wrestled and played varsity soccer, football, tennis and hockey. His internship and residency were done at Menninger School of Psychiatry. Dr. Warner had a consulting relationship with Swarthmore College while being senior attending psychiatrist at Pennsylvania Hospital in Philadelphia. In 1963 Silas wed Libby Severinghaus Dingle.
A dedicated researcher and writer, Silas co-authored a major work on personality disorders. His other published works dealt with how preschool children learn, and the relationship between truth, reality, lies and delusions. Among his written articles was a major feature in "The New York Times" on cocaine use in professional sports.
Silas died in San Francisco on November 20, 1993.
[edit] Some Published Works
- "Your Child Learns Naturally" (with Edward B. Rosenberg)
- "The Psychotic Personality" (with Myron L. Glucksman, M.D.)
- "Freud and the Mighty Warrior"
- "Dreams in New Perspective: The Royal Road Revisited"
[edit] References
1. Princeton Alumni Weekly http://webscript.princeton.edu/~paw/memorials/memdisplay.php?id=1529