The encounter with God in myth and madness
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2007
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Background: It is well known how often psychiatric patients report religious experiences. These are especially frequent in schizophrenic and epileptic patients as the subject of their delusions. The question we pose is: are there differences between this kind of religious experiences and those we find in religious texts or in the mythological tradition? Results: An overview on famous mythological narratives, suchas The Aeneid, allows us to establish that the divinities become recognizable to the human being at the moment of their departure. Thus, Aeneas does not recognise his mother, Venus, when she appears to him in the middle of the forest at the coast of Africa. A dialogue between the two takes place, and only at the end of the encounter, when she is going away and already with her back to Aeneas, she shows her son the signs of her divinity: the rose-flush emanating from her neck, her hair perfume and the majesty of her gait. Something analogous can be observed in the encounter of M
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Artículo de publicación SCOPUS
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/164357
DOI: 10.1186/1747-5341-2-12
ISSN: 17475341
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Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine, Volumen 2, Issue 1, 2018,
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