
Prof. Chizh. The significance of political life in the etiology of mental illness. Review of psychiatry, and experimental psychology. No. I-3. 1908
Author(s) -
Ivan N. Zhilin
Publication year - 1908
Publication title -
nevrologičeskij vestnik
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2304-3067
pISSN - 1027-4898
DOI - 10.17816/nb97124
Subject(s) - mental illness , prejudice (legal term) , politics , insanity , mentally ill , psychology , relevance (law) , psychiatry , psychoanalysis , civilization , criminology , social psychology , mental health , law , political science
The author does not see, contrary to generally accepted views, the relationship between political events and cases of insanity supposedly on this basis. In his opinion, the higher the civilization, the fuller, therefore, freedom, the more the frail and wretched survive, including the nervously and mentally ill. And vice versa, the restriction of this freedom, the cruel suppression of attempts to win it, does not lead to an increase in the number of mentally ill people: perhaps predisposed persons fall ill, and then by chance, outside the direct influence of events, giving those reasons for doubtful conclusions about a causal relationship between illness and historical moment; the leaders of the movement, on the other hand, usually have the most gifted and steadfast spiritual organization, without prejudice to the moral upheavals of the revolutionary period.