Illness As Metaphor (1978), ch. 7 (pp. 55-56)
Context: There is a peculiarly modern predilection for psychological explanations of disease, as of everything else. Psychologizing seems to provide control over the experiences and events (like grave illnesses) over which people have in fact little or no control. Psychological understanding undermines the "reality" of a disease. That reality has to be explained. (It really means; or is a symbol of; or must be interpreted so.) For those who live neither with religious consolations about death nor with a sense of death (or of anything else) as natural, death is the obscene mystery, the ultimate affront, the thing that cannot be controlled. It can only be denied. A large part of the popularity and persuasiveness of psychology comes from its being a sublimated spiritualism: a secular, ostensibly scientific way of affirming the primacy of "spirit" over matter.
“I'm convinced that responsibility is some kind of psychological disease.”
Source: Alcatraz Versus the Knights of Crystallia
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Brandon Sanderson 313
American fantasy writer 1975Related quotes
“Tomorrow's some kind of Stranger I'm not supposed to see.”
"The Neighbors"
Actor (2009)
Source: The God of Jane: A Psychic Manifesto (1981), p. 4
Context: I don't feel "possessed" or "invaded during sessions. I don't feel that some superspirit has "taken over" my body. Instead I feel as if I am practicing some precise psychological art, one that is ancient and poorly understood in our culture; or as if I'm learning a psychological science that helps me map the contours of consciousness itself.
"Eighteen Days Without You": December 18th
Love Poems (1969)
“Indifferentism is the worst kind of disease that can affect people.”
Political Science for Civil Services Main Examination (2010)
1989 interview. Reported in William H. Honan, The New York Times (December 4, 1999) "Madeline Kahn: Funny Actress in 'Blazing Saddles'", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, p. A-11
Attributed
Interview with Jean Claude Bringuier (1969)
“Subject to a kind of disease, which at that time they called lack of money.”
Source: Gargantua and Pantagruel (1532–1564), Pantagruel (1532), Chapter 16.