Paranoia: Difference between revisions
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* Fear of poisoning, adulterated food (e.g., [[aspartame]]) or water (e.g., [[Water Fluoridation controversy|fluoridation]]) as part of a secret plot |
* Fear of poisoning, adulterated food (e.g., [[aspartame]]) or water (e.g., [[Water Fluoridation controversy|fluoridation]]) as part of a secret plot |
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* Reading a story, watching a [[Film|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 life has been filmed as a TV show, is one of the more commonly referenced films. |
* Reading a story, watching a [[Film|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 life has been filmed as a TV show, is one of the more commonly referenced films. |
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* Along the same vein: ''Even paranoids have enemies.'' |
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* In the video game [[Psychonauts]], the security guard of Thorney Towers, Boyd Cooper, has fallen into paranoia after being hypnotized by Coach Oleander, and constantly mumbles [[conspiracy theories]] invoving an individual known simply as "The Milkman". |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
Revision as of 22:11, 25 October 2006
Paranoia | |
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Specialty | Psychiatry, psychology, psychotherapy |
Paranoia is an excessive anxiety or fear concerning one's own well-being which is considered irrational and excessive, perhaps to the point of being a psychosis. This typically includes persecutory beliefs concerning a likely threat, or a belief in a conspiracy theory. In the original Greek, παράνοια (paranoia) means simply madness (para = outside; nous = mind) and it is this use which was traditionally used in psychiatry to describe any delusional state. However, the exact use of the term has changed over time in medicine, and because of this, modern psychiatric usage may vary.
Use in psychiatry
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 delusion was present, but without any apparent deterioration in intellectual abilities and without any of the other features of dementia praecox, the condition later renamed schizophrenia. Notably, in his definition, the belief does not have to be persecutory to be classified as paranoid, so any number of delusional beliefs 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 delusions specifically, lives on in the classification of paranoid schizophrenia, which denotes a form of schizophrenia where delusions are prominent.
More recently, the clinical use of the term has been used to describe delusions 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 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 primarily non-psychotic diagnoses, such as paranoid personality disorder. Paranoia can also be a side effect of medication or recreational drugs.
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.
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 of grandeur")
- Conspiracy theories, such as seeing seemingly unrelated news events as parts of a larger, typically conspiratorial plan
- Exaggerated fear of terrorists, criminals or bandits
- Black helicopters and other mass surveillance
- Persecution from powerful adversaries such as UFOs, terrorists, the Men in Black, secret societies or demons
- Paranoia or belief in conspiracy theories involving perceived political or social enemies (as in The Paranoid Style in American Politics by Richard Hofstadter)
- 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 life has been filmed as a TV show, is one of the more commonly referenced films.
See also
- Conspiracy theory
- Delusion
- Delusional disorder
- Distrust
- James Tilly Matthews
- Monomania
- Paranoid personality disorder
- Schizophrenia
- Paranoia RPG
- Ideas of reference
- Paranoia Agent
- Paranoia Online Game
- Illuminati
- The Paranoid Style in American Politics
- Paranoia (magazine)
Further reading
- Farrell, John. Paranoia and Modernity: Cervantes to Rousseau (Cornell University Press, 2006).
- Freeman, D. & Garety, P.A. (2004) Paranoia: The Psychology of Persecutory Delusions. Hove: Psychology Press. ISBN 1-84169-522-X
- Igmade (Stephan Trüby et al, eds.), 5 Codes: Architecture, Paranoia and Risk in Times of Terror", Birkhäuser 2006. ISBN 3-7643-7598-1
- Kantor, Martin. (2004) Understanding Paranoia: A Guide for Professionals, Families, and Sufferers. Westport: Praeger Press. ISBN 0-275-98152-5
- Munro, A. (1999) Delusional disorder. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-58180-X
- Sims, A. (2002) Symptoms in the mind: An introduction to descriptive psychopathology (3rd edition). Edinburgh: Elsevier Science Ltd. ISBN 0-7020-2627-1