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  2. Divine madness, also known as theia mania and crazy wisdom, refers to unconventional, outrageous, unexpected, or unpredictable behavior linked to religious or spiritual pursuits. Examples of divine madness can be found in Buddhism, Christianity, Hellenism, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism and Shamanism .

  3. Oct 19, 2018 · Preview. In this excellent book, Yulia Ustinova deals with the complex concept of god-sent mania in classical Greece. As a historian of the ancient mind, she investigates certain forms of altered consciousness and states of possession, which are described in numerous ancient sources.

    • Yulia Ustinova
  4. Feb 20, 2004 · What makes his madness a divine gift, however, is that the ascent is now revealed as involving recollection of a prior pre-natal ascent taken in the company of a god.

  5. Jun 27, 2008 · Madness comes in two general forms: the diseased state of mental dysfunction, and a divergence from ordinary rationality that a god sometimes brings (see 265a–b). Divine madness subdivides into love, Dionysian frenzy, oracular prophecy, and poetic composition (244b–245a).

  6. Dec 22, 2003 · More serious is the distinction between ordinary madness and divine madness, and the defense of the superiority of divine madness, which Socrates’ second speech sets out to defend. In particular, he sets out to show that the madness of love or eros “is given us by the gods to ensure our greatest good fortune” (245b7–c1).

  7. Jan 31, 2021 · For Plato’s aesthetic philosophy as presented Ion, art is divine inspiration. It is a divine madness similar to that overtaking a prophet when the god speaks through them.

  8. Sep 10, 2016 · Divine Madness: Mental Illness And The Creative Mind. A.D. Hurley September 10, 2016 Authors, Human Interest, More. 997. Plato said, “ Creativity is a divine madness…a gift from the gods .”. For centuries, the correlation between creativity and mental illness has been palpable.

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