Author
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Topic: Saints And Madmen
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Heart--Shaped Cross Knowflake Posts: 10839 From: 11/6/78 11:38am Boston, MA Registered: Aug 2004
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posted April 01, 2009 06:46 PM
This is an interesting read: Saints and Madmen Psychology Opens It's Doors To Religion http://www.amazon.com/Saints-Madmen-Psychiatry-Opens-Religion/dp/0805059024 The asylums of today are filled with the saints of yesterday. ~ Valus
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Heart--Shaped Cross Knowflake Posts: 10839 From: 11/6/78 11:38am Boston, MA Registered: Aug 2004
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posted April 01, 2009 06:57 PM
Psychiatry, once famously opposed to religion, has done an about-face. Like the legendary explorers of a century ago, some psychiatrists have set off into what they see as the last frontier: the spiritual self. In this moving and impeccably researched narrative, Russell Shorto tells remarkable stories of people suffering from what once were deemed spiritual afflictions, then came to be seen as purely medical disorders, and now are being treated as both.In the process, Shorto brings to bear issues from the cutting edge of consciousness studies. He explores the shared territory of psychosis and mysticism; the changing meaning of "self," "soul," "mind," and "brain"; the theory that psychotropic drugs have a spiritual dimension; the meaning of religious terrorism; and the possibility that addiction and depression are spiritual conditions. In weaving his case studies into a single story, Shorto delivers a concise update on the science of the mind and the newest efforts to probe the deepest meaning of human existence. Praise "Russell Shorto's engaging book is a valuable contribution to the development of...a scientific paradigm for the study of spirituality and mental illness."--Common Boundary "[A] cogent, absorbing book.... A vivid account of psychiatry's recent interest in 'nonrational' cognitive experience."--Kirkus Reviews About the Author Russell Shorto is the author of Gospel Truth: The New Image of Jesus Emerging from Science and History. He has written for GQ, The New Yorker, The Miami Herald, Travel & Leisure, and The New York Times Magazine. He lives in Putnam Valley, New York, with his wife and their two daughters. http://us.macmillan.com/saintsandmadmen IP: Logged |
Heart--Shaped Cross Knowflake Posts: 10839 From: 11/6/78 11:38am Boston, MA Registered: Aug 2004
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posted April 02, 2009 12:54 AM
Ironically, these people may have a greater need than most to grapple with questions of ultimate meaning.According to traditional psychology, they are also the one group for whom religion poses an actual danger. ~ Russell Shorto, Saints and Madmen
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koiflower Knowflake Posts: 3089 From: Australia Registered: Jun 2008
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posted April 03, 2009 09:28 PM
Joan of Arc heard voices.I once head music that sounded heavenly. I once heard a choir that sounded heavenly. Another time, I saw a vision of mischievous small croney-like demons circling above me (a Christian friend saw them, too). This is something I don't really tell people. I know I'm not mad, but consider myself to be a well-balanced person. p.s. I'm no saint, either IP: Logged |
Heart--Shaped Cross Knowflake Posts: 10839 From: 11/6/78 11:38am Boston, MA Registered: Aug 2004
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posted April 03, 2009 10:18 PM
I believe you. IP: Logged |
koiflower Knowflake Posts: 3089 From: Australia Registered: Jun 2008
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posted April 03, 2009 10:19 PM
What? You believe me to be a well balanced person??? You're brave Thanks for believing me - It seems unbelievable and weird, but that was my experience!! IP: Logged | |