The Measure and the Choice: A Pathographic Essay on Samuel JohnsonStory Scientia, 1971 - 231 pages |
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Page 67
... death ? I believe that it is beyond doubt that the fear of madness and the fear of death were closely interwoven in him . They arise from the same source . The extent to which this fear was to influence his work will be discussed later ...
... death ? I believe that it is beyond doubt that the fear of madness and the fear of death were closely interwoven in him . They arise from the same source . The extent to which this fear was to influence his work will be discussed later ...
Page 137
... death , and the fear of becoming insane . When we say fear of death , we use a misnomer . Johnson was not afraid to die , nor was he afraid of death as such ; he was afraid of what would happen after death . " He had , indeed , an awful ...
... death , and the fear of becoming insane . When we say fear of death , we use a misnomer . Johnson was not afraid to die , nor was he afraid of death as such ; he was afraid of what would happen after death . " He had , indeed , an awful ...
Page 138
... death , but he feared nothing else , not even what might occasion death " ( 32 , p . 579 ) . The last addition is very important . A neurotic would certainly not have disregarded the various causes of death . Johnson's courage is ...
... death , but he feared nothing else , not even what might occasion death " ( 32 , p . 579 ) . The last addition is very important . A neurotic would certainly not have disregarded the various causes of death . Johnson's courage is ...
Contents
Preface | 5 |
Johnson in parenthesis | 20 |
The degeneration concept in psychiatry | 28 |
Copyright | |
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abnormalities activity anxiety become Boswell's cerebral chapter characteristics common sense compulsive courage creative death defence psychisms degeneration concept degenerative disposition degenerative personality dégénéré supérieur derealization described diagnosis diaries discussed disease disharmony disintegration disorders Doctor Johnson effort emotional encounter endogenous depression epilepsy epileptic epileptic depressions essays existence existential expression fact Fanny Burney fear Freud friends Harmondsworth hereditary human Idler imagination importance indicates individual influence James Boswell Johnson's personality Johnsonian later lesions Lichfield lived London loss of correlation manifestations means melancholy mental disturbances mentioned mind mode mood moralistic nature neurosis neurotic defence never Nijkerk non-being opinion original Oxford passionate patient Pembroke College period potentialities prose psychiatry psychological psychotic Rambler Rambler nr reality reason remark resistance principle resistance psychisms Rümke Samuel Johnson schizophrenia significance structure sympathetic symptoms syndrome temporal epilepsy temporal lobe Thrale tion Univ Willem Elsschot word writing wrote