Muses, Madmen, and Prophets
by
Daniel B. Smith
Order:
USA
Can
Penguin, 2007 (2007)
Hardcover
Reviewed by Tim Davis
L
et's begin with Socrates, Muhammad, William Blake, and Teresa of Ávila, just to name a few significant people from a potential list of millions. They seem like an unlikely grouping of personalities. What do they have in common with each other?
T
hey heard voices. These were not corporeal voices from friends, acquaintances, enemies, or others, but they were disembodied voices from - for lack of a better word -
elsewhere
.
T
he sources and characteristics of the voices as heard by the aforementioned eclectic quartet - and as heard by millions of others throughout history and in our times - is the fascinating subject of Daniel B. Smith's erudite and entertaining new study.
B
ased on considerable research and written with a conversational narrative flair,
Muses, Madmen, and Prophets
is Smith's persuasive and provocative explanation as to why so many people from so many different backgrounds have experienced - either sporadically or chronically - something that we call auditory hallucinations. Are people who experience auditory hallucinations insane? Are they singular intellects? Are they in touch with a higher power (God)? Or are they besieged by vividly spectral or demonic imaginations?
R
ead Smith's book and learn that:
1. '
It is possible to hear voices and lead a normal life. Thousands of people exist who hear voices but never enter psychiatric care - and do not need to.
' This is reassuring.
2. '
A high percentage of the population will hear a voice at one time or another in their lives.
' I can personally vouch for this assertion!
3. '
Some sane people who heard voices experience great distress merely from the fear of being called 'crazy.'
' I would refer you to the previous annotation.
4. '
Hearing voices can be caused by vigorous prayer, by drugs, or even by profound silence.
' Ditto!
5. '
There has always been a conflict between an individual's desire to interpret voices on a personal level and the dominant orthodoxy of the time. Throughout most of Western history, voices have been interpreted in religious terms. Today, it is considered the primary symptom of schizophrenia.
' In a 21st century Western world dominated by secularism and science, this is an increasingly disturbing trend.
W
hatever you may think you already know about auditory hallucinations, prepare yourself to be surprised and edified by Smith's wonderful book. Engaging and exemplary,
Muses, Madmen, and Prophets
is a powerfully important new book. Enjoy!
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