Dak Posted April 16, 2005 Posted April 16, 2005 how many psycological disorders are truly unique to their sufferers? what i mean is, most mental disorders (as far as i can tell) involve mental prosesses/phenomena which aren't unique to the sufferer, rather are more pronounced in the sufferer than in non-sufferers. egs: dyslexia: some people are heavaly dislexic. others are just 'bad at spelling/reading' schitzophrenia many people hear voices, oftern expressing thoughts that the person disagrees with, but can ignore them/accept them as normal mental prosess ocd i always have to check my front door to make sure its locked, oftern having to go back from a few meters from my door to check, even tho i know its locked - arguably an ocd tendancy (and pissing annoying), but i dont have ocd and it doesnt manifest itself in many other ways. yet people with this tendancy much stronnger have ocd. so do any disorders involve a mental phenomena which is unique to the sufferer and not present in the general populance?
ramin Posted April 19, 2005 Posted April 19, 2005 how many psycological disorders are truly unique to their sufferers? what i mean is' date=' most mental disorders (as far as i can tell) involve mental prosesses/phenomena which aren't unique to the sufferer, rather are more pronounced in the sufferer than in non-sufferers. egs: [u']dyslexia[/u]: some people are heavaly dislexic. others are just 'bad at spelling/reading' schitzophrenia many people hear voices, oftern expressing thoughts that the person disagrees with, but can ignore them/accept them as normal mental prosess ocd i always have to check my front door to make sure its locked, oftern having to go back from a few meters from my door to check, even tho i know its locked - arguably an ocd tendancy (and pissing annoying), but i dont have ocd and it doesnt manifest itself in many other ways. yet people with this tendancy much stronnger have ocd. so do any disorders involve a mental phenomena which is unique to the sufferer and not present in the general populance? I take what you're saying as proof that these are easily preventable mental suppressions, i.e. highly plastic. That's why genetics would seem more an afterthough or a distraction when speaking about them.
Dak Posted April 19, 2005 Author Posted April 19, 2005 nooooooo, im saying: being bad at spelling = being bad at spelling being very bad at spelling = dyslexia --- hearing voices = hearing voices hearing lots of bad voices = scitzophrenia ie the condition is a phenomina that is present in 'normal' people but cranked up (i know there vastly over-generalised, but hey) are there any psycological conditions where the mental phenomena isnt present in 'normal' people, albeit at a much lower level? sorry for any unclarity
ramin Posted April 19, 2005 Posted April 19, 2005 nooooooo' date=' im saying: being bad at spelling = being bad at spelling being very bad at spelling = dyslexia --- hearing voices = hearing voices hearing lots of bad voices = scitzophrenia ie the condition is a phenomina that is present in 'normal' people but cranked up (i know there vastly over-generalised, but hey) are there any psycological conditions where the mental phenomena isnt present in 'normal' people, albeit at a much lower level? sorry for any unclarity[/quote'] Yeah, I haven't responded to your question yet. But my comment stands...
Callipygous Posted April 19, 2005 Posted April 19, 2005 nooooooo' date=' im saying: being bad at spelling = being bad at spelling being very bad at spelling = dyslexia [/quote'] i guess thats one way of looking at it... its really not the same thing though.
Dak Posted April 19, 2005 Author Posted April 19, 2005 Yeah, I haven't responded to your question yet. But my comment stands... aah, i misread you first post. i read " i take it what your saying is..." i guess thats one way of looking at it... its really not the same thing though. well, i have taken numerouse dyslexia tests and 'scored' everywhere between heavily dislexic and just plain ol' cack at spelling, so i assume, at least with dyslexia, that the symptoms are present in the general populace just at a lower magnitude
BourBohemian Posted April 19, 2005 Posted April 19, 2005 I would further add those who are on the autism spectrum to the list, both low function and Asperger.
ramin Posted April 19, 2005 Posted April 19, 2005 I would further add those who are on the autism spectrum to the list, both low function and Asperger. That's interesting because autism reminds me of Solipsism, a highly regarded philosophy of mind that other minds don't exist... Plus people have problems attending to others' beliefs & feelings and I would agree that Autistics are simply an extreme suppression of intentionality for this attention.
reverse Posted April 24, 2005 Posted April 24, 2005 I get what you mean. that an overt form of any natural mental process looks like a mental illness. well that makes sense. it's more about balance than if a process exists or not. people aren’t suffering form an illness, their normal processes are out of balance, producing an illness. ps a friend of mine has the door checking problem. I really start to get p o'ed when he takes ages to get out of the house.
reverse Posted April 24, 2005 Posted April 24, 2005 Ps Ramin. I really dont think the world is what you make it. the world is the world, you live in it, get used to it. First you eat, then you think. you can eat without thinking, the reverse will not happen. I like the old stapler test, to figure out what has priority. (reality or your impression of it).
ramin Posted April 25, 2005 Posted April 25, 2005 Ps Ramin. I really dont think the world is what you make it. the world is the world' date=' you live in it, get used to it. First you eat, then you think. you can eat without thinking, the reverse will not happen. I like the old stapler test, to figure out what has priority. (reality or your impression of it).[/quote'] How are you relating any of this to how I think of the world? What is it that you think I'm wrong about? Do you know what potentialism is? What about situated cognition and social factors? Ramin
reverse Posted April 27, 2005 Posted April 27, 2005 get over it. go have a swim or hang out with some friends or something. Things are what they are.
ramin Posted April 27, 2005 Posted April 27, 2005 get over it. go have a swim or hang out with some friends or something. Things are what they are. If you're having a hard time communicating, maybe you need the swim.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now