Go Mad from the Revelation: Difference between revisions
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(→Literature: Clarified the Lovecraft examples) |
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**** To be precise, they discovered that there was a one-to-one correspondence between mental states and brain states, meaning there was no possibility of evidence for a soul or spirit. Current neurology says it's a good bet this is true for humans, too... |
**** To be precise, they discovered that there was a one-to-one correspondence between mental states and brain states, meaning there was no possibility of evidence for a soul or spirit. Current neurology says it's a good bet this is true for humans, too... |
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**** That assumes anyone thinks that the soul affects one's mind independent of one's brain. |
**** That assumes anyone thinks that the soul affects one's mind independent of one's brain. |
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* As mentioned above, a [[Cthulhu Mythos]] protagonist protagonist who ''isn't'' [[Body Horror|transformed into something... not nice]] or dead at the end of the story usually suffers this trope. |
* As mentioned above, a [[Cthulhu Mythos]] protagonist protagonist who ''isn't'' [[Body Horror|transformed into something... not nice]] or dead at the end of the story usually suffers this trope. |
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** In the original [[H.P. Lovecraft]] stories, outright madness was not as common as in later Mythos fiction. Examples from Lovecraft's stories include: |
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*** The nameless narrator of "Dagon". |
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*** Some of Johansen's shipmates in "The Call of Cthulhu". |
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*** Young Danforth in ''At the Mountains of Madness''. |
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* In William Tenn's story ''Firewater'', humanity is being observed by aliens that appear to have god-like powers, and anyone who tries too hard to understand them goes insane. {{spoiler|Near the end, it's revealed that the aliens have a similar problem with understanding humans.}} |
* In William Tenn's story ''Firewater'', humanity is being observed by aliens that appear to have god-like powers, and anyone who tries too hard to understand them goes insane. {{spoiler|Near the end, it's revealed that the aliens have a similar problem with understanding humans.}} |
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* ''The Bishop Murder Case'': Philo Vance posits that someone went mad from studying quantum psychics. |
* ''The Bishop Murder Case'': Philo Vance posits that someone went mad from studying quantum psychics. |
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* In ''[[Burying the Shadow]]'' any attempt by a [[Dream Weaver|soulscaper]] to heal an [[Our Angels Are Different|eloim]]'s mind results in the soulscaper going stark raving mad. |
* In ''[[Burying the Shadow]]'' any attempt by a [[Dream Weaver|soulscaper]] to heal an [[Our Angels Are Different|eloim]]'s mind results in the soulscaper going stark raving mad. |
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* [[The Chronicles of Professor Jack Baling]]: Let’s just say that Jack’s study of his student’s perpetual motion machine don’t make him the... most stable of individuals. |
* [[The Chronicles of Professor Jack Baling]]: Let’s just say that Jack’s study of his student’s perpetual motion machine don’t make him the... most stable of individuals. |
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== [[Live Action TV]] == |
== [[Live Action TV]] == |