How does one define sound 'mental health'? — Posty McPostface
I did some writing on 'mood' last year. There are reams of writing on 'mood disorder', but strikingly there is next to nothing on what an ordered or normal mood is, either in psychology or philosophy. We know disorder when we see it, seems to be the thinking, even if we can't define what it deviates from. — mcdoodle
I've been reading some different corners of Aristotle and thinking about 'eunoia'. It gets (mis)translated as 'goodwill' (which is Cicero's fault for the intervening Latin). For Aristotle eunoia is the feeling one experiences and expresses towards one's deepest friends - the baseline of his Nicomachean Ethics - and in rhetoric it's the emotional connection you make to those you are trying to persuade of something. — mcdoodle
I like the idea of it as a kind of baseline for mental sense-making and strength. We could form a society: the Eunoiacs. (could also be a name for a band :)) — mcdoodle
I thought it was an edifying thought that what is ethical can be thought to be conducive to a sound and healthy mind?
Ah, reminds me of Plato. — Mitchell
So the immoral person is mentally ill? — Mitchell
And if the other behaves toward you in a way counter
to your ethical standards do you attribute this to his evil intentions or do you explain this on the basis of a different worldview on his part? — Joshs
The golden rule is worthless without insight into the other's way of construing the world. — Joshs
Without this insight, one is forced to impune the other's motives and this simply justifies endless wars of righteousness. — Joshs
Perhaps, mental health simply be understood as practicing good moral behavior and conduct or just living ethically? — Posty McPostface
That's a pretty common theme not exclusive to some philosophers who criticise social structures for creating psychological distress. Im sure many socialist and Marxist psychologists and social theorists should come to mind.
Hence my last post. Has this focus on creating an ideal society been futile and instead we should just focus on the individual and their beliefs about and in relation to society? — Posty McPostface
Has this focus on creating an ideal society been futile and instead we should just focus on the individual and their beliefs about and in relation to society? — Posty McPostface
One of the questions that motivated Plato in his Republic is the question "How can one be mentally healthy in (mentally) sick society?" (Or so it seems to me.) — Mitchell
Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, and the soul of soulless conditions. It is the opium of the people — Karl Marx
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