Victor Săhleanu

At that point, with the onset of the Communist regime, the institution became the Carol Davila University of Medicine and Pharmacy.

[1] In 1963, he became a primary care endocrinologist and, at the request of Eugen A. Pora, began teaching courses in biophysics and biomathematics at Babeș-Bolyai University in Cluj.

[2] In February 1990, after the fall of the regime, he was restored as head of the Romanian Academy's anthropological research center, by government decree.

[3] He and his wife Zoe, a pediatrician, had two sons: Adrian George, who became a philologist and psychoanalyst; and Valentin, later an architect.

[2] Săhleanu published over 2000 articles and 60 books, in fields that included methodology, medical psychology and psychoanalysis, ethics, aesthetics and the history of medicine and science.

[4] He was also an essayist and poet, publishing volumes in 1961, 1972, 1977 and 1997; and was among the founders of the Romanian Society of Writer and Journalist Physicians.

Victor Săhleanu