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You Can Catch Madness

You Can Catch Madness

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Two ordinary people suddenly go insane together. It’s a premise we enjoy from a safe distance—because surely it could never be us. I’m not so sure. Shared madness isn’t rare, it isn’t aberrant, and it sits a lot closer to ordinary love than we’d like to think. Strip away the spectacle and what’s left is the most common thing in the world: two lonely people who found a home in each other.

Show notes Further reading
  • Folie à deux: the madness of two — the article that inspired this lecture.
  • Four models of psychopathology — how we decide what counts as “abnormal”, and why a benign shared delusion slips past all of it.
  • The loneliness epidemic and Explaining group dynamics — why social isolation is so dangerous for us.
  • It’s Not Social Media, Life Is Just Worse — a companion lecture on modern isolation.
  • Successful Prophets — the same connection mechanism scaled from the pair to the group.
References
  • Ursula and Sabina Eriksson (the Swedish sisters).
  • Folie à deux; Jules Baillarger, Charles Lasègue and Jean-Pierre Falret.
  • Shared psychotic disorder (the undiagnosis quote), and the intimacy-in-isolation qualification.
  • The Japanese family case (shared delusional hallucination); delusional parasitosis; shared pseudocyesis.
  • The Tromp family (BBC, Mamamia).
  • Theranos: Elizabeth Holmes, Sunny Balwani, and Bad Blood.
  • Group polarisation and risky shift.
  • Gang-stalking, Morgellons, and mass psychogenic illness.
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