Madness and Possession in P?li Texts

Buddhist Studies Review 31 (2):195-214 (2015)
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Abstract

In the context of contemporary interest in the use of Buddhist meditation practices in modern psychology, psychiatry and psychotherapy, this article offers a preliminary survey of a subject hitherto almost completely unstudied: madness in Premodern P?li texts. Using story-literature as well as doctrinal and jurisprudential texts, the article aims to collect together material on three ways in which the ideas and behaviours of madness are used: the literal-pathological, in comparisons, and in the metaphorical-evaluative sense where it is alleged that everyone who is not enlightened is ‘mad’. It is centered around an eightfold classification of madness given in the commentary to a J?taka story, the Birth Story about Dar?mukha.

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References found in this work

The conceit of self-loathing.Maria Heim - 2009 - Journal of Indian Philosophy 37 (1):61-74.
Buddhism and the Mythology of Evil.Ninian Smart & T. O. Ling - 1964 - Philosophical Quarterly 14 (56):284.

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