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- From: J5J@psuvm.psu.edu (John A. Johnson)
- Newsgroups: alt.atheism
- Subject: Theism and mental disorder (Was: Re: Why Xians Post in Alt.Atheism
- Message-ID: <93021.112206J5J@psuvm.psu.edu>
- Date: 21 Jan 93 16:22:06 GMT
- References: <1993Jan19.210657.3182@cnsvax.uwec.edu>
- <930121.123526.8P3.rusnews.w165w@mantis.co.uk>
- Organization: Penn State University
- Lines: 34
-
- In article <930121.123526.8P3.rusnews.w165w@mantis.co.uk>, mathew
- <mathew@mantis.co.uk> says:
- >
- >nyeda@cnsvax.uwec.edu (David Nye) writes:
- >> I wonder if anyone has looked at the mental health of atheists versus
- >> theists. Certainly many schizophrenics are excessively and often
- >> bizarrely religious, but I wonder about average folks.
-
- I missed Nye's orignal post, probably because the subject line said
- nothing about mental health and theism. I wish people would change the
- subject lines of their articles when they change the subject.
-
- At any rate, schizophrenia might be the wrong disorder to look for
- parallels to theistic thought disorders. Temporal lobe epilepsy might
- by more appropriate. Consider the following epileptic signs:
-
- "anxiety or fear, vestibular changes (vibrations or uplifting
- sensations), auditory impressions, forced or intrusive thinking,
- dreamy states, and sometimes frank hallucinations . . .
- deja vu, sensations of 'a presence' (usually with mystical or
- religious overtones), leaving the body (mental diplopia; out-
- of-body experience), and precognition. . . .
- increased concern with religious or philosophical issues that are
- paralleled by hypergraphia, the tendency for detailed and extensive
- writing . . . The speech of these patients is dominated by
- circumstantiality and there is a concomitant perseveration or
- viscosity in social settings. Anger, diminished sex drive, and
- humorless sobriety have been reported . . .
- prone to deepened and widened affect that is often manifested by
- the 'sense of the personal' (events are explained as signs or
- indicators of destiny or the experience of profound, cosmic significance."
- from Persinger, M. A., & Makarec, K. Temporal lobe epileptic signs and
- correlative behaviors displayed by normal populations. _The Journal of
- General Psychology_, _114_, 179-195.
-