Mental Madness Research Paper

Words: 1879
Pages: 8

Mental madness or religious freedom
Historysenctence
Throughout history, civilizations developed a code of ethics and a morality founded on their sanction of religious beliefs. The religious connotations establish the communal rights and wrongs and form strong bonds among the members exclusive to each society. Not only did religions uniform a communal relationship and social order for the members of each society, but an internal development of self-worth and acceptance developed inside of each individual with conflicting identifications of the religious beliefs. Collectively conjoined in this article are mental health issues arising from different religious belief systems to hopefully show a broad spectrum of effects on an individual’s mental
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The mental health of women certainly prospered since the era of the subservient housewife. In the United States, many societies developed their lifestyles according to the Bible. Women described as a weak, untrustworthy modern-day Eve. Several religious connotations suggest a woman to be submissive to her husband and quiet. For example, in the King James Bible it references, source (0000, p.) Much like the slave longing to be free but unaware of the possibility, women developed detrimental consequences to their mental health from the ruling of men over them and no inkling of self-worth. With the greatest minds in history, predominantly men, to regulate mental health guidelines and partake in such discriminatory actions, the aftermath of deductions prove validity to the circumstances they were formed under. Again, the history of a society portrays the use of religion as a tool to control and dominate. From the biblically referenced, “ drop them back off at the gate” (0000, p.00) SOURCE Women institutionalized if not conformed to marriage …show more content…
History presents some prime examples of surgeries performed on the brain or damage to the brain which result in the person losing their moral compass, so to speech. For instance, in the article, “Philosophy of Mind: Coming to Terms with Traumatic Brain Injury,” written by Randall D. Buzan, Jeff Kupfer, Dixie Eastridge, and Andres Lema-Hincapie, according to Phineas Gage’s doctor, he represented a normal and kind man before being struck with a rod through his brain, but afterward