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A user's guide to melancholy / Mary Ann Lund.

LIBRA RC537 .L86 2021
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Lund, Mary Ann, 1978- author.
Contributor:
Edward Potts Cheyney Memorial Fund.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Burton, Robert, 1577-1640. Anatomy of melancholy.
Burton, Robert.
Melancholy--History--17th century.
Melancholy.
Depression, Mental--History--17th century.
Depression, Mental.
Medicine in literature.
Depressive Disorder.
Depression.
Medicine in Literature.
History, Medieval.
Anatomy of melancholy (Burton, Robert).
History.
Medical Subjects:
Depressive Disorder.
Depression.
Medicine in Literature.
History, Medieval.
Genre:
History.
Physical Description:
xiii, 256 pages : black and white illustrations ; 23 cm
Place of Publication:
Cambridge ; New York, NY : Cambridge University Press, 2021.
Summary:
"The story Burton tells of the sixteenth-century Jewish Frenchman not only shows how strong the imagination can be, but also plays out an intriguing philosophical puzzle. A man puts his life at risk by crossing over a brook by night but, since he is unable to see, he cannot perceive the danger he is in. Instead, his perception comes after the event. The case is an unusual one - and so probably appealed to Burton - because normally fear is an emotion connected to something that is is yet to happen. Aristotle describes it as a 'sort of pain or agitation derived from the imagination of a future destructive or painful evil'. But in this case, the man's fear is connected to an event that has already occurred. Burton found the story in the writings of the Spanish humanist Juán Luís Vives (1492-1540) on the soul. Vives uses it to illustrate the notion that our imaginations function by making something present to us, whether that something is in the past, future, or is completely non-existent. Darkness robbed the Frenchman of the sensory information he needed to interpret the risk of walking along the plank, so his imagination supplied it instead (but only later, since he did not know what he was doing at the time). Burton removes one interesting detail in Vives' original account, that the man was returning home by night on his donkey and had drifted off to asleep. Whereas Vives' version has him unconscious, Burton makes him alert but unseeing. When he revisited the scene the next day, the man saw what he could not have done by night, and died of shock at what might have been. A fall from a height may have put his life at risk, but it was imagination that killed him"-- Provided by publisher.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Local Notes:
Acquired for the Penn Libraries with assistance from the Edward Potts Cheyney Memorial Fund.
Other Format:
ebook version :
ISBN:
9781108838849
1108838847
9781108972444
1108972446
OCLC:
1201676504
Publisher Number:
99986924417

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