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Prince described
Beauchamp as having three main distinct personalities, each of which had differing degrees of knowledge of the others. He wrote: "although making use of the same body, each ... has a distinctly different character ... manifested by different trains of thought, ... views, beliefs,
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but later appeared spontaneously. Prince was active in naming the personalities and in expressing a preference for one of them. Prince "cured" her by reconciling her other personalities with the original one. Beauchamp later married one of Prince's assistants.
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Beauchamp was a 23-year-old student who came to Prince, a Boston neurologist, because she was suffering from a "nervous disorder". Her alternate personalities first appeared under
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between 1898 and 1904. She was one of the first persons diagnosed as having multiple personalities (a disorder now termed
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ideals, and temperament, and by different acquisitions, tastes, habits, experiences, and memories..."
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The dissociation of a personality; a biographical study in abnormal psychology (1906)
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The dissociation of a personality: a biographical study in abnormal psychology
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16:"Miss Beauchamp" redirects here. For other people with the same name, see
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Early case of multiple personality disorder (now known as
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This case was widely cited as the "prototypical case" of
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143:Multiple Personality: An Exercise in Deception
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57:was the pseudonym of a woman, actually named
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