Suppose a patient attends a psychiatry assessment and says "Doc I'm insane." The doctor asks why they believe such a thing. They continue to explain quite reasonably several reasons why they are insane. The doctor agrees that these signs and behaviours indicate insanity. Except now (s)he is face with a clinical dilemma.
If he agrees with the patients beliefs about the concept of insanity is the patient insane? Surely only a sane person could describe insanity and I couldn't imagine a truly insane person ever admitting they arent perfectly fine. — Benj96
Surely you've read Catch-22. If you're crazy, you can get out of flying more bombing missions. But if you don't want to fly any more bombing missions that shows you're sane! — fishfry
If it's being implied that a person claiming [his own] insanity is sane are we to infer that a person claiming [his own] sanity is actually insane? :chin: — TheMadFool
Well, within reason, yeah. I would simply ask you to qualify "what is the normal mind, the normal mental state?" — Benj96
I think anyone who claims they are completely sane, that is to say that they hold no delusions whatsoever, merely show a resistance to accepting the fact that they dont know fundamentally very much about anything, about the what and how the mind is and more importantly how it ought to be. Very few probably do. In essence its ignorant to plead wisdom. So that kind of blind arrogance as to assume you are the status quo, the state of true normality....is pretty ludicrous — Benj96
I think its wise to always maintain a regard for yourself as potentially hazardous, as capable of immoral conduct, of behaviour one would consider erratic, illogical, insane. Sanity is relative and it's also a very broad spectrum. I would trust one who is unsure of their mind but cautious over one who is absolutely positive their beliefs assumptions and behaviour are the correct and ideal ones. — Benj96
amounts to losing touch with reality — TheMadFool
building a belief system around what we call facts (truths of our world) — TheMadFool
just in a dramatically different way — Benj96
Now if you said losing touch with "societal functionality" then I would be more inclined to agree. — Benj96
How can one build a belief system around facts? — Benj96
Both are subject to change/revision over time — Benj96
See how belief and fact can overlap and directly influence the existence if one another? — Benj96
So, if we are talking about insanity, we arent talking about reality or delusion - because no one has authority of their descriptions, nor fact or belief, but rather whether "their reality" is tolerable by "my reality" and "others realities". It comes down to fear of the unknown or the poorly understood. Fear of chaotic behaviour and a lack of predictability. In essence societal fear that they cannot "control" the insane within the relative degrees of freedom permitted to people which must function together. — Benj96
Can this person function socially? — Benj96
Are hermits insane? — TheMadFool
Yes, but the usual recommendation is to put facts before all else. — TheMadFool
Believe facts, avoid things that contradict facts. — TheMadFool
Being sane doesn't imply your beliefs have to be fixed. In fact sensible people always make it a point to update their beliefs in light of new evidence. — TheMadFool
.Yes, but the usual recommendation is to put facts before all else. — TheMadFool
You lost me there. I'm working with the standard definition of insanity which includes delusional thought and losing touch with reality. — TheMadFool
Well, if you think it's just an issue of "just in a dramatically different way" this question doesn't make sense does it? Why should functioning in society matter if insanity is just a "dramatically different way" of experiencing reality? — TheMadFool
Their solitude does not separate them from collective society — Benj96
see no problem or insanity there. — Benj96
The point of determining that both facts and beliefs can completely 180 over time is to highlight that "delusion" can never be fully determined just as no one can describe perfectly the "reality" as to which "delusion from" refers to. Otherwise I'd imagine they would be incredibly famous. — Benj96
To me there is no "Delusion" but simply an "alternate experience of reality" - and perhaps that approach would omit stigma surrounding insanity and open minds to to more compassion, patience and tenacity in understanding a human being. — Benj96
Exactly. It defined with reference to "delusion" and "reality". What are those? Can you define them for all 8 billion of us please? You cannot avoid personal or culturally bias in the determination of "insanity". — Benj96
It shouldn't. That's my point. "Insanity" shouldn't be associated with societal dysfunction. That leaves the door open to misdiagnosis of people experiencing just a temporary crisis or change in behaviour, those which reject societal expectations and make it known, or anyone who is protesting, revolting, boycotting or making any social disruptions, and those who choose their personal "beliefs" over "facts" such as the religious, the spiritual, mystics, mediums and all the other alternative and unusual lifestyles. — Benj96
In short, as I mentioned before, sanity is about being rational, how one thinks, rather than about what beliefs one holds, what one thinks. — TheMadFool
Correct, but a consequence of that is that everyone is at least slightly “insane”, as we are all imperfectly rational, subject to cognitive biases, etc. — Pfhorrest
4.9k
If you do a thought experiment about thinking, is it a real experiment? — unenlightened
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.