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Home > Health & Wellness > Mental & Emotional Health   »   lycanthropy and zooanthropic paranoia

 
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Old Oct 24, 2009, 09:55 PM
jaime90
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lycanthropy and zooanthropic paranoia

I want to know more about lycanthropy and similar mental conditions out of pure curiosity. Is it a legitimate thing? What do lycanthropics do? How do doctors diagnose something like that? I read about it in a book and now i'm curious =) Any and all answers will be much apprieciated.

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Old Oct 29, 2009, 09:46 PM   #2  
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I once worked in a restaurant with a woman who claimed to be lycanthropic. However, it was also obvious that she'd been out in the mid-day sun too long without a hat, if you know what I mean.
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Old Nov 3, 2009, 10:11 AM   #3  
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Is this when people think they are warewolves and such?
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Old Nov 3, 2009, 10:31 AM   #4  
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This doesn't answer my question....
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Old Nov 3, 2009, 10:35 AM   #5  
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Sorry.
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Old Nov 6, 2009, 08:56 AM   #6  
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Lycanthropy, a psychosis in which the patient has delusions of being a wild animal (usually a wolf), has been recorded since antiquity. The Book of Daniel describes King Nebuchadnezzar as suffering from depression that deteriorated over a seven-year period into a frank psychosis at which time he imagined himself a wolf. Among the first medical descriptions were those of Paulus Aegineta during the later days of the Roman Empire. In his description of the symptom complex, Aegineta made reference to Greek mythology in which Zeus turned King Lycaon of Arcadia into a raging wolf. Thereafter, references to lycanthropy appeared in the ancient literature. Many medieval theologians envisioned lycanthropy as a consequence of the evil eye.

Delusions of being a wolf or some other feared animal are universal and, although rare in the industrialized countries, still occur in China, India, Africa, and Central and South America. The animals in the delusioned transformation include leopards, lions, elephants, crocodiles, sharks, buffalo, eagles, and serpents.

Not infrequently, bizarre and chaotic sexuality is expressed in a primitive way through the lycanthropic symptom complex. Patients whose internal fears exceed their coping mechanisms may externalize them via projection and constitute a serious threat to others. Throughout the ages, such individuals have been feared because of their tendencies to commit bestial acts and were themselves hunted and killed by the populace. Many of these people were paranoid schizophrenics.

Case Report

A Case of Lycanthropy--Rostenstock and Vincent






i could not find anything on zooanthropic paranoia sorry.
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