Shakespeare can teach doctors about mind-body link
Albert Rolls
alprolls at earthlink.net
Fri Nov 25 21:28:15 CST 2011
Sorry but the study seems ridiculous as described. The authors, at least according to the article, didn't look at Renaissance texts, medical or otherwise, other than plays and perhaps sonnets etc. The connection between mind and body was commonplace as was the connection between body and world. That the 46 non-Shakespearean texts, picked arbitrarily for all we know, do not deal with the issue the author was interested in exploring tells us nothing about Renaissance ideas regarding the connection between the mind and the body and certainly shouldn't be taken as an indication of Shakespeare's realization of some universal truth that could be useful to doctors today. Simon Forman's diaries also suggest "symptoms . . . have roots" in the mind but of course Forman's name doesn't resonate like that of Shakespeare.
-----Original Message-----
>From: Dave Monroe <against.the.dave at gmail.com>
>Sent: Nov 25, 2011 9:43 PM
>To: pynchon -l <pynchon-l at waste.org>
>Subject: Shakespeare can teach doctors about mind-body link
>
>http://thechart.blogs.cnn.com/2011/11/25/shakespeare-can-teach-doctors-about-mind-body-link/
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