
Muses, Madmen, and Prophets
Autor | |
Quelle | Sonstige Datenquellen |
ISBN | 978-0-14-311315-7 |
Lieferbarkeit | lieferbar |
Katalogisat | Basiskatalogisat |
Verlag | Penguin Publishing Group |
Erscheinungsdatum | 29.07.2014 |
Beschreibung (Kurztext)
A history of auditory hallucination traces the medical community's understanding and treatment of the phenomenon throughout the ages while drawing on literary, psychological, and anthropological perspectives in order to shed light on how patients have managed and even found inspiration from related disorders. Reprint.
Beschreibung (Langtext)
An inquiry into hearing voices-one of humanity's most profound phenomena
Auditory hallucination is one of the most awe-inspiring, terrifying, and ill- understood tricks of which the human psyche is capable. In the age of modern medical science, we have relegated this experience to nothing more than a biological glitch. Yet as Daniel B. Smith puts forth in Muses, Madmen, and Prophets, some of the greatest thinkers, leaders, and prophets in history heard, listened to, and had dialogues with voices inside their heads. In a fascinating quest for understanding, Smith examines the history of this powerful phenomenon, and delivers a ringing defense of the validity of unusual human experiences.