Apathy

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia



Apathy



Apathy

Apathy (also called impassivity or perfunctoriness) is a state of indifference, or the suppression of emotions such as concern, excitement, motivation and passion. An apathetic individual has an absence of interest or concern to emotional, social, or physical life. They may also exhibit an insensibility or sluggishness. Often, apathy has been felt after witnessing horrific acts, such as the killing or maiming of people during a war. It is also known to be associated with many conditions, some of which are: depression, Alzheimer’s disease, Chagas’ disease, Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, dementia, Korsakoff’s Syndrome, excessive vitamin D, general fatigue, Huntington’s disease, Pick’s disease, progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), schizophrenia, Schizoid Personality Disorder, Bipolar Disorder and others. Some medications and the heavy use of drugs such as heroin may bring apathy as a side effect. The concept of apathy became more wellknown after World War I, when it was called "shell shock". Soldiers who lived in the trenches amidst the bombing and machine gun fire, and who saw the battlefields strewn with dead and maimed comrades developed a sense of disconnected numbness and indifference to normal social interaction. In 1950, US novelist John Dos Passos wrote that "Apathy is one of the characteristic responses of any living organism when it is subjected to stimuli too intense or too complicated to cope with. The cure for apathy is comprehension." US educational philosopher Robert Maynard Hutchins summarized the concerns about political indifference when he claimed that the "death of democracy is not likely to be an assassination from ambush. It will be a slow extinction from apathy, indifference, and undernourishment."



History

Apathy etymologically derives from the Greek απάθεια (apatheia)[1], a term used by the Stoics to signify indifference for what one is not responsible for (that is, according to their philosophy, all things exterior, one being only responsible of his representations and judgments). Another way of understanding the way that the Stoics saw apathy was as "the extinction of the passions by the ascendency of reason." Many Christians believe that the concept was then reappropriated by Christians, who adopted the term to express a contempt of all earthly concerns, a state of mortification, as the gospel prescribes. The word has been used since then among more devout writers. Clemens Alexandrinus, in particular, brought the term exceedingly in vogue, thinking hereby to draw the philosophers to Christianity, who aspired after such a sublime pitch of virtue.[1] Macaulay referred to "The apathy of despair." Prescott described "A certain apathy or sluggishness in his nature which led him . . . to leave events to take their own course."



Relationship with illnesses

Depression

John McManamy argues that although psychiatrists do not explicitly deal with the condition of apathy, it is a psychological problem for some depressed people, in which they get a sense that "nothing matters", the "lack of will to go on and the inability to care about the consequences". [2] He describes depressed people who "...cannot seem to make myself do anything", who "can’t complete anything", and who do not "feel any excitement about seeing loved ones". [3] He acknowledges that the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders does not discuss apathy. In a Journal of Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences article from 1991, Dr Robert Marin MD claimed that apathy occurs due to brain damage or neuropsychiatric illnesses such as Alzheimer’s, dementia, Parkinson’s, or Huntington’s, or else an event such as a stroke. Marin argues that apathy should be regarded as a syndrome or illness. [4] A review article by Robert van Reekum MD et al. from the University of Toronto in



1



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

the Journal of Neuropsychiatry (2005) claimed that "depression and apathy were a package deal" in some populations.



Apathy

but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t. by John McManamy [3] Apathy Matters - Apathy and Depression Psychiatry may not care about apathy, but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t. by John McManamy [4] Psychiatry may not care about apathy, but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t. by John McManamy



References

1. ^ This article incorporates content from the 1728 Cyclopaedia, a publication in the public domain. [1] 2. Based on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2006. [1] Apatheia, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, at Perseus [2] Apathy Matters - Apathy and Depression Psychiatry may not care about apathy,



External links

• Apathy - causes and background information • The Roots of Apathy - Essay By David O. Solmitz



Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apathy" Categories: Abnormal psychology, Psychological attitude, Greek loanwords, Symptoms of bipolar disorder This page was last modified on 22 May 2009, at 01:14 (UTC). All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.) Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a U.S. registered 501(c)(3) taxdeductible nonprofit charity. Privacy policy About Wikipedia Disclaimers



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