 |
|
 |
|
|
 |
Thomas Boschloo and his PARANOIA |
 |
 |
|
|
06-11-06 12:12 AM
In popular culture, the term paranoia is usually used to describe excessive
concern about one's own well-being, sometimes suggesting a person holds
persecutory beliefs concerning a threat to themselves or their property and
is
often linked to a belief in conspiracy theories.
The term is more typically used in a general sense to signify any delusion,
or
more specifically, to signify a delusion involving the fear of persecution.
The
exact use of the term has changed over time, and because of this, psychiatri
c
usage may vary.
Explanation
In psychiatry, the term paranoia was used by Emil Kraepelin to describe a me
ntal
illness in which a delusional belief is the sole, or most prominent feature.
In
his original attempt at classifying different forms of mental illness, Emil
Kraepelin used the term pure paranoia to describe a condition where a delusi
on
was present, but without any apparent deterioration in intellectual abilitie
s
and without any of the other features of dementia praecox, the condition lat
er
renamed schizophrenia.
In the original Greek, paranoia means simply madness (para = outside;
nous = mind). Kraepelin developed a definition from this root involving
delusional beliefs. Notably, in his definition, the belief does not have to
be
persecutory to be classified as paranoid, so any number of delusional belief
s
can be classified as paranoia. For example, a person who has the sole delusi
onal
belief that he is an important religious figure would be classified by Kraep
elin
as having 'pure paranoia'.
Although the diagnosis of pure paranoia is no longer used (having been
superseded by the diagnosis of delusional disorder) the use of the term to
signify the presence of delusions in general, rather than persecutory delusi
ons
specifically, lives on in the classification of paranoid schizophrenia, whic
h
denotes a form of schizophrenia where delusions are prominent.
More recently, the clinical use of the term has been used to describe delusi
ons
where the affected person believes they are being persecuted. Specifically,
they
have been defined as containing two central elements:
The individual thinks that harm is occurring, or is going to occur, to him o
r
her.
The individual thinks that the persecutor has the intention to cause harm.
Paranoia is often associated with psychotic illnesses, particularly
schizophrenia, although attenuated features may be present in other primaril
y
non-psychotic diagnoses, such as paranoid personality disorder.
Examples of clinical paranoia
In the unrestricted use of the term, common paranoid delusions can include t
he
belief that the person is being followed, poisoned or loved at a distance (o
ften
by a media figure or important person, a delusion known as erotomania or de
Clerambault syndrome).
Other common paranoid delusions include the belief that the person has an
imaginary disease or parasitic infection (delusional parasitosis); that the
person is on a special quest or has been chosen by God; that the person has
had
thoughts inserted or removed from conscious thought; or that the person's
actions are being controlled by an external force.
Many despotic rulers (for example Stalin) allegedly suffered from paranoia.
This
presents an interesting question because in Stalin's case, it is quite likel
y
that many people really were out to get him (some theories concerning his de
ath
hypothesize that he was poisoned). The possibility exists that with enough
enemies, it is impossible to be clinically paranoid. It still might be possi
ble
to identify a paranoid in that situation via his unrealistic assessment of t
he
relative threat presented by various enemies, but it is not clear that
non-paranoid persons are all that good at this. This raises interesting
philosophical questions about the criteria by which we can diagnose a belief
as
paranoid or delusional, as well as prompting the joke that "Just because you
're
paranoid doesn't mean they're not out to get you".
Paranoia depicted in popular culture
In popular culture paranoia is often represented as including:
Belief in having special powers or being on a special mission (a "delusion o
f
grandeur")
Conspiracy theories, such as seeing seemingly unrelated news events as parts
of a larger, typically conspiratorial plan
Black helicopters and other mass surveillance
Persecution from powerful adversaries such as UFOs, terrorists, the Men in
Black, secret societies or demons
Mind control through invisible rays, and tinfoil hats to combat them
Fear of poisoning, adulterated food (e.g., aspartame) or water (e.g.,
fluoridation) as part of a secret plot
Reading a story, watching a movie, or listening to a song and feeling that
one's life is exactly like that of the subject of said story, movie, or song
.
The movie The Truman Show, which depicted a man who discovers his entire lif
e
has been filmed as a TV show, is one of the more commonly referrenced films.
The maxim: Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean that they aren't really
out to get you.
-----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE-----
Version: 2.6.3ia
hIwDx/zK+nQxFNcBA/9tuMtFOcZVbpCKzSMlpR1x3yy+XnJ75K9M/i6jrWad67aP
kgYV+XOvIHZuCNLrhuBBoymYJH9JjI0gMS2H695O
Alih3s0du2chQaJJfSluLzx+
XeNANadomjiDNpsA4N2KGWEH4oryYC5py5s1c44R
tuBxuLZUTc9UlPWz67W7kKYA
AAMRkpiUkp08stf3w+csxx42bAxwIdVCDN79RgM2
52k6BmZHmmoxskbg0LCMtyve
LmpxGZkVHdwYoSIcSvJ0E4/ ucQdfTda2ijXmsVMzxJP55TkqJEUpkFW+g9SZv60
3
AuAGbbK5Ljed4CoISx1mDRTD28PkOsRmB03MT9DE
nzE1fv5iTJZ7DsuRKuOp2Yli
gUbPlehGu/ USfgzS8WpuiQt66O7q5c78LUsLTYmwNydx3+t6x2
fFZpmA6ydYoZXn
yTM+BoGNHVZfUbda3t9hYHQCliR99CbguFy/+DEc7KppI/FSSauYaCvc4lCPodBQ
zoS5ILm31ZoqA4xh58PHlRq2FnzQaIbnowQ74ckk
OuabsWdHmlkq8yGZs5E6Ykv3
o0kJjihsf2vShgbX66mop5M2XgIa7yhsefLA5BMR
NcQ0MgEZ70ywqTfxkqWecoe8
ugJ6MuZ7qF0P4Umd82jeGn7DEDkysCjceLGm1reK
WkFmB55vJwIarJgC9CMlU4cq
SN7QjsX5uXM/ I6UneYeAolboy9Riiz07zztpXpJpHs11+wMTYvu6
4vorlQxvz9I9
QKlg2D5P56VV/ yo0JlPtwHCs8tVPX2Wl27vvhfNsDAqw39YIRX4Xi
zptatct/pFf
FYQC/1n75j1s4xgixu7qrRhOr58/xkqgbxahrQeEHpI0bPKc5KAgaloN9RoBhG7C
l47nfu9yoidLLSXikPgTE88pa6geM/pzo9nDengKlZZ5h7qdDBuXP5zsKOMPZRuO
1CodUNLLdQQWP1JYMno3/u/dKfM/WyZrmFCM9Oidi6k/dWMh3gY5aTrgH2UVvAlI
J9kr2KhIN2Oay6y6+xrzQy3tmbEFq7gPaFnOPGgA
OLPeqanYyUKn17N3UFdz09Mi
TmemHVvTlzVxmsUFITiE6UWGiG+OC4LEB7IHizeP
VvEadXrXB70XfWdw4YWGyt6v
YucXNoVjnQQAPKk3HNzUMVyPoIqXAM2VRsrruuQ8
d6d7ee1C43L0BBAjn1QrXZoM
d0umL6CH6aQwYCub/bLEKM1k6fM=
=NRmY
-----END PGP MESSAGE-----
[ Post a follow-up to this message ]
|
|
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
|
 |
Re: Thomas Boschloo and his PARANOIA |
 |
 |
|
|
06-11-06 12:12 AM
If you like trivia, that's a line from "Telefon" starring Charles Bronson.
Frog-Admin
On 10 Jun 2006, nobody@anon.lcs.mit.edu (Anonymous) wrote:
>In popular culture, the term paranoia is usually used to describe excessive
>concern about one's own well-being, sometimes suggesting a person holds
>persecutory beliefs concerning a threat to themselves or their property and
is
>often linked to a belief in conspiracy theories.
>The term is more typically used in a general sense to signify any delusion,
or
>more specifically, to signify a delusion involving the fear of persecution.
The
>exact use of the term has changed over time, and because of this, psychiatr
ic
>usage may vary.
>
>Explanation
>
>In psychiatry, the term paranoia was used by Emil Kraepelin to describe a
>mental
>illness in which a delusional belief is the sole, or most prominent feature
. In
>his original attempt at classifying different forms of mental illness, Emil
>Kraepelin used the term pure paranoia to describe a condition where a delus
ion
>was present, but without any apparent deterioration in intellectual abiliti
es
>and without any of the other features of dementia praecox, the condition la
ter
>renamed schizophrenia.
>In the original Greek, paranoia means simply madness (para = outside;
>nous = mind). Kraepelin developed a definition from this root involving
>delusional beliefs. Notably, in his definition, the belief does not have to
be
>persecutory to be classified as paranoid, so any number of delusional belie
fs
>can be classified as paranoia. For example, a person who has the sole
>delusional
>belief that he is an important religious figure would be classified by
>Kraepelin
>as having 'pure paranoia'.
>Although the diagnosis of pure paranoia is no longer used (having been
>superseded by the diagnosis of delusional disorder) the use of the term to
>signify the presence of delusions in general, rather than persecutory delus
ions
>specifically, lives on in the classification of paranoid schizophrenia, whi
ch
>denotes a form of schizophrenia where delusions are prominent.
>More recently, the clinical use of the term has been used to describe delus
ions
>where the affected person believes they are being persecuted. Specifically,
>they
>have been defined as containing two central elements:
> The individual thinks that harm is occurring, or is going to occur, to hi
m or
> her.
> The individual thinks that the persecutor has the intention to cause harm
.
>Paranoia is often associated with psychotic illnesses, particularly
>schizophrenia, although attenuated features may be present in other primari
ly
>non-psychotic diagnoses, such as paranoid personality disorder.
>
>Examples of clinical paranoia
>
>In the unrestricted use of the term, common paranoid delusions can include
the
>belief that the person is being followed, poisoned or loved at a distance
>(often
>by a media figure or important person, a delusion known as erotomania or de
>Clerambault syndrome).
>Other common paranoid delusions include the belief that the person has an
>imaginary disease or parasitic infection (delusional parasitosis); that the
>person is on a special quest or has been chosen by God; that the person has
had
>thoughts inserted or removed from conscious thought; or that the person's
>actions are being controlled by an external force.
>Many despotic rulers (for example Stalin) allegedly suffered from paranoia.
>This
>presents an interesting question because in Stalin's case, it is quite like
ly
>that many people really were out to get him (some theories concerning his d
eath
>hypothesize that he was poisoned). The possibility exists that with enough
>enemies, it is impossible to be clinically paranoid. It still might be poss
ible
>to identify a paranoid in that situation via his unrealistic assessment of
the
>relative threat presented by various enemies, but it is not clear that
>non-paranoid persons are all that good at this. This raises interesting
>philosophical questions about the criteria by which we can diagnose a belie
f as
>paranoid or delusional, as well as prompting the joke that "Just because yo
u're
>paranoid doesn't mean they're not out to get you".
>
>Paranoia depicted in popular culture
>
>In popular culture paranoia is often represented as including:
> Belief in having special powers or being on a special mission (a "delusio
n of
> grandeur")
> Conspiracy theories, such as seeing seemingly unrelated news events as pa
rts
> of a larger, typically conspiratorial plan
> Black helicopters and other mass surveillance
> Persecution from powerful adversaries such as UFOs, terrorists, the Men i
n
> Black, secret societies or demons
> Mind control through invisible rays, and tinfoil hats to combat them
> Fear of poisoning, adulterated food (e.g., aspartame) or water (e.g.,
> fluoridation) as part of a secret plot
> Reading a story, watching a movie, or listening to a song and feeling tha
t
> one's life is exactly like that of the subject of said story, movie, or s
ong.
> The movie The Truman Show, which depicted a man who discovers his entire
life
> has been filmed as a TV show, is one of the more commonly referrenced fil
ms.
> The maxim: Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean that they aren't rea
lly
> out to get you.
>
>-----BEGIN PGP MESSAGE-----
>Version: 2.6.3ia
>
>hIwDx/zK+nQxFNcBA/9tuMtFOcZVbpCKzSMlpR1x3yy+XnJ75K9M/i6jrWad67aP
> kgYV+XOvIHZuCNLrhuBBoymYJH9JjI0gMS2H695O
Alih3s0du2chQaJJfSluLzx+
> XeNANadomjiDNpsA4N2KGWEH4oryYC5py5s1c44R
tuBxuLZUTc9UlPWz67W7kKYA
> AAMRkpiUkp08stf3w+csxx42bAxwIdVCDN79RgM2
52k6BmZHmmoxskbg0LCMtyve
>LmpxGZkVHdwYoSIcSvJ0E4/ ucQdfTda2ijXmsVMzxJP55TkqJEUpkFW+g9SZv60
3
> AuAGbbK5Ljed4CoISx1mDRTD28PkOsRmB03MT9DE
nzE1fv5iTJZ7DsuRKuOp2Yli
>gUbPlehGu/ USfgzS8WpuiQt66O7q5c78LUsLTYmwNydx3+t6x2
fFZpmA6ydYoZXn
>yTM+BoGNHVZfUbda3t9hYHQCliR99CbguFy/+DEc7KppI/FSSauYaCvc4lCPodBQ
> zoS5ILm31ZoqA4xh58PHlRq2FnzQaIbnowQ74ckk
OuabsWdHmlkq8yGZs5E6Ykv3
> o0kJjihsf2vShgbX66mop5M2XgIa7yhsefLA5BMR
NcQ0MgEZ70ywqTfxkqWecoe8
> ugJ6MuZ7qF0P4Umd82jeGn7DEDkysCjceLGm1reK
WkFmB55vJwIarJgC9CMlU4cq
>SN7QjsX5uXM/ I6UneYeAolboy9Riiz07zztpXpJpHs11+wMTYvu6
4vorlQxvz9I9
>QKlg2D5P56VV/ yo0JlPtwHCs8tVPX2Wl27vvhfNsDAqw39YIRX4Xi
zptatct/pFf
>FYQC/1n75j1s4xgixu7qrRhOr58/xkqgbxahrQeEHpI0bPKc5KAgaloN9RoBhG7C
>l47nfu9yoidLLSXikPgTE88pa6geM/pzo9nDengKlZZ5h7qdDBuXP5zsKOMPZRuO
>1CodUNLLdQQWP1JYMno3/u/dKfM/WyZrmFCM9Oidi6k/dWMh3gY5aTrgH2UVvAlI
> J9kr2KhIN2Oay6y6+xrzQy3tmbEFq7gPaFnOPGgA
OLPeqanYyUKn17N3UFdz09Mi
> TmemHVvTlzVxmsUFITiE6UWGiG+OC4LEB7IHizeP
VvEadXrXB70XfWdw4YWGyt6v
> YucXNoVjnQQAPKk3HNzUMVyPoIqXAM2VRsrruuQ8
d6d7ee1C43L0BBAjn1QrXZoM
>d0umL6CH6aQwYCub/bLEKM1k6fM=
>=NRmY
>-----END PGP MESSAGE-----
[ Post a follow-up to this message ]
|
|
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
|
 |
Re: Thomas Boschloo and his PARANOIA |
 |
 |
|
|
06-11-06 06:12 PM
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Anonymous schreef:
[snip]
> In the unrestricted use of the term, common paranoid delusions can
include the
> belief that the person is being followed, poisoned or loved at a distance
(often
> by a media figure or important person, a delusion known as erotomania or d
e
> Clerambault syndrome).
> Other common paranoid delusions include the belief that the person has an
> imaginary disease or parasitic infection (delusional parasitosis); that th
e
> person is on a special quest or has been chosen by God; that the person ha
s had
> thoughts inserted or removed from conscious thought; or that the person's
> actions are being controlled by an external force.
So what are you going to do about it Frog-Admin? Have a cute little
seance with all your little imaginary friends?
For added fun read this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Paran...>
DSM-IV-TR.29
Regs,
Thomas
- --
"When paranoia is outlawed .."
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v1.4.3 (MingW32)
Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org
iQB5AwUBRIwhVwEP2l8iXKAJAQGnNAMdH5kGPVFF
d42J+Yh95GCk7VDC6g1hrJlG
tvOthOH4QVDbqTcRhhSlvgoA5DLMHGdgpSf4gDwO
8j6aSlv8Tx6Gaz2IupgzBFCb
8CQr1Dqy7kRy6Zu8NobalNFpieTMxEl5P7gmng==
=nNIV
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
[ Post a follow-up to this message ]
|
|
|
 |
|
 |
|
 |
|
|
 |
Re: Thomas Boschloo and his PARANOIA |
 |
 |
|
|
06-11-06 06:12 PM
In article <448c2140$0$31654$e4fe514c@news.xs4all.nl>
"Thomas J. Boschloo" <nospam@hccnet.nl> wrote:
>
> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
>
> Anonymous schreef:
> [snip]
> include the
>
> So what are you going to do about it Frog-Admin?
Obsession noted.
[ Post a follow-up to this message ]
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
 |
Re: Thomas Boschloo and his PARANOIA |
 |
 |
|
|
06-11-06 06:12 PM
George Orwell schreef:
> In article <448c2140$0$31654$e4fe514c@news.xs4all.nl>
> "Thomas J. Boschloo" <nospam@hccnet.nl> wrote:
[snip]
>
> Obsession noted.
You did before, didn't you?
Who is obsessed now..
[ Post a follow-up to this message ]
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
 |
Re: Thomas Boschloo and his PARANOIA |
 |
 |
|
|
06-11-06 06:12 PM
Thomas J. Boschloo schreef:
> George Orwell schreef:
> [snip]
>
> You did before, didn't you?
>
> Who is obsessed now..
Oh, I totally forgot about the subject of this thread. I am so sorry.. I
will have to be 'obsessed' once more..
[ Post a follow-up to this message ]
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
 |
Re: Thomas Boschloo and his PARANOIA |
 |
 |
|
|
06-12-06 12:11 AM
"George Orwell" <nobody@mixmaster.it> wrote in message
news:c73c0e3261e98ebbfe32d83137e41210@mi
xmaster.it...
> In article <448c2140$0$31654$e4fe514c@news.xs4all.nl>
> "Thomas J. Boschloo" <nospam@hccnet.nl> wrote:
>
> Obsession noted.
FROG !! COME BACK!
ALL THESE OTHER GUYS ARE ASSHOLES.
I miss you Frog-Admin.
--Thomas
[ Post a follow-up to this message ]
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|
|
Sponsored Links |
 |
 |
|
|
 |
All times are GMT. The time now is 11:51 AM. |
 |
|
|
 |
|
 |
|
|
 |
|
Forum Rules:
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
|
HTML code is OFF
vB code is ON
Smilies are ON
[IMG] code is OFF
|
|
|
|
Medical and Health forum | Computer Games Reviews | Graphics design forum
|
 |
|
 |
|