TranceAddict Forums (www.tranceaddict.com/forums)
- Political Discussion / Debate
-- Megalomania: very dangerous?
Megalomania: very dangerous?
Cheney, Mao, Hitler, are a few people who I could think of who displayed characteristics of Megalomania. Megalomaniacs don't care about anyone but themselves, if a few people million die because of their actions, they feel no remorse. I would think that key neo-cons are megalomaniacs.
Oh yeah, Ghenghis Khan was a Megalomaniac too, he wanted to conquer the world.
Perhaps worldwide we should test for personality disorders so these guys don't come into power yeah?
---
Oh and Jesus and Mohamed said that a divine spoke to them and and them only. In this day and age we call that schizophrenia and we lock them up or give them meds.
Is all major strife in this world due to the mentally ill?
Re: Megalomania: very dangerous?
| quote: |
| Originally posted by mndeg Cheney, Mao, Hitler, are a few people who I could think of who displayed characteristics of Megalomania. Megalomaniacs don't care about anyone but themselves, if a few people million die because of their actions, they feel no remorse. I would think that the whole neo-conservative ideology reeks of the disorder. Oh yeah, Ghenghis Khan was a Megalomaniac too, he wanted to conquer the world. Perhaps worldwide we should test for personality disorders so these guys don't come into power yeah? |

| quote: |
| IMO, just by definition of the office Dick Cheney holds and how he came to be in said office disqualifies him as having megalomania. |
| quote: |
Megalomania (from the Greek word μεγαλομανία is a historical term for behavior characterized by delusional fantasies of wealth, power, genius, or omnipotence - often generally termed as delusions of grandeur or grandiose delusions. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by mndeg explain? |
| quote: |
| Uh, what do you call the general belief in neo-conservatism? |
| quote: |
| There is science that backs Al Gore's belief in global warming, it doesn't matter if Gore thinks highly of himself. |
i think democracy has proven to be immencely more reliable in practice than whatever science Al Gore uses to come to his conclusions. | quote: |
| He seems to have no remorse. |
I suggest reading a biography of Genghis Khan - he was hardly the bloodthirsty megalomaniac you assume. He viewed his life as carried by fate - uniting the Mongol tribes, punishing insolence in the Kara Kum, etc. He murdered people out of what he saw as tactical necessity - by killing the family of your enemies, you've eliminated the threat of vengeance.
In any case, the Mongols instituted the first semi-democratic state since Rome (and the first that practiced religious freedom). Genghis built synagogues, churches, mosques, and temples for Confucianism and Buddhism. Though he wrought havoc throughout Central Asia, he was actually a fairly interesting guy who I wouldn't use the word megalomaniac to describe.
Every man seeks to either destroy or assimilate his fellow man so that he can copulate with his fellow woman. That's sort of the point of almost every human endeavor, especially the ones you can cite through recorded history.
In this sense, we are all megalomaniacal, as the essence of competition for survival is deeply ingrained in our biology. The current state of our society lends itself to supporting a particular breed of warlord, slightly different than times past, but essentially the same.
Even people who preach things such as love and compassion and forgiveness, demagogues of religions and preachers of morality, all seek a slice of the pie - we have developed [in some ways] past our tendency to murder all opposition, as assimilating - devouring - has proven to be a more effective method of defeating polar ideologies due to stigmas we have fabricated on slaughter... or at least slaughter we can see.
Not to say that wholesale murder does not occurr, that couldn't be farther from the truth. But bloodlust and a will to dominate is not something uncommon amongst males of every species and is most certainly not a disorder in any strict sense of the word.
Re: Megalomania: very dangerous?
The first three on the list, perhaps.
| quote: |
| Originally posted by mndeg Megalomaniacs don't care about anyone but themselves, if a few people million die because of their actions, they feel no remorse. I would think that key neo-cons are megalomaniacs. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by mndeg Oh yeah, Ghenghis Khan was a Megalomaniac too, he wanted to conquer the world. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by mndeg Perhaps worldwide we should test for personality disorders so these guys don't come into power yeah? |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by mndeg Oh and Jesus and Mohamed said that a divine spoke to them and and them only. In this day and age we call that schizophrenia and we lock them up or give them meds. |
| quote: |
| Originally posted by mndeg Is all major strife in this world due to the mentally ill? |
Re: Re: Megalomania: very dangerous?
| quote: |
| Originally posted by shaolin_Z In the case of the former, a spectacular display of ignorance of world history beyond the Western world is blatantly evident. |
Re: Megalomania: very dangerous?
I've thought about it this before also.
I think that perhaps psychology is relative to your culture and epoch. What I mean by that is that we assume everyone else throughout history has cognated the same as we do, and it simply is not so.
As a matter of fact, I would go so far as to say that psychological evolution would leave most other recent cultures relatively mentally ill in our view. Take the egyptians for example; there are theories that they all "suffered" from a state of schizophrenia.
The fact is, however, that they didn't suffer from anything, it was their social norm and they worked with it. They were closer to nature to us, and thus instinct played a more vital role in their consciousness than the cultural conscious we have in play today.
I think our world suffers from a great number of mental illnesses as cultural collectives. We're jung and still growing, however, and hopefully will sort it out. If not, then we weren't meant to be.
One thing I will add is that drugs play a huge role on the development of specie. And for humans, the last 2000 years at least has been mired in one drug: alcohol. Imagine the effects of it now, the meanness and the irrationality, and draw the connection to our modern mess.
Re: Re: Megalomania: very dangerous?
| quote: |
| Originally posted by DJ Shibby One thing I will add is that drugs play a huge role on the development of specie. And for humans, the last 2000 years at least has been mired in one drug: alcohol. Imagine the effects of it now, the meanness and the irrationality, and draw the connection to our modern mess. |
Powered by: vBulletin
Copyright © 2000-2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.