Video 1: Multiple personality disorders The first video is intended to explain issues related to multiple personality disorders. The documentary starts with a simple historical background of illness. Beginning in the Middle Ages, the religious community explained the state of evil possessing mankind, the phenomenon known as multipersonality disorder in modern psychiatry. In the beginning of the 20th century, research on this subject made psychologists think that a person could have multiple independent functions.
There were many misunderstandings about the differences between multipersonistic disorder (MPD) and dissociative identity disorder (DID). This is not to ignore my paper criticism, "Multiplasmic disorder: factual or novel?" Several discussions criticized the discussion of my thesis. These do not have a solid foundation, so they can not be stopped. The first comment by Clopper "Multiple personality disorder and another ID disorder" are the same, but in the second paragraph there was a mistake. Mr. Klopper did not agree to reclassify the MPD as a DID, so he refuted this view in the next sentence and said he needed to reclassify the disease as he solved many problems. If that makes sense, this argument will not be true.
Another identity disorder, often referred to as a multipersistent disorder, exists in a strange mental disorder in which one person acquires two or more different identities or personality states. This disease has attracted a lot of attention by Sybil and the proverbs of "three sides of Eve". Multiple personality disorders caused by severe and inhuman sexual, physical and mental abuse affect the consciousness of the individual, which in turn makes an altar of the altar. - In the movies Civil and Primal were worried about the separation of identity between Civil and Aaron's psychological barriers respectively. Separation of identity was formerly known as multihuman disturbance, but individuals have individuality and at least two personality, each with their own thoughts, memories, ideas, and ways of doing (( www). Mental-healthmatters.com)