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health and illness in terms of a humoral spectrum, they also contain attempts to categorize and differentiate the respective states of balance and imbalance. For example, The Sacred Disease offers the following differentiation between various kinds of madness: “Those who are mad through phlegm are quiet, and neither shout nor make a disturbance; those maddened through bile are noisy, evil-doers and restless, always doing something inopportune.”42 If the brain is chilled, “the patient suffers from causeless distress and anguish,” but when the brain is suddenly heated, the patient “shouts and cries at night.”43

      While it differentiates these types of madness based on the various humors, the Sacred Disease suggests that these states could also be part of normal occurrences such as dreams. Like these nightly visions, they too are reversible. As the Hippocratic author explains, the heating of the brain (which is caused by an abundance of blood that rushes into it, and boils it) can also follow a fearful dream. When the person wakes up and regains his consciousness, the blood is dispersed into the veins once more, and the “mad” manifestations cease. The text also argues that the same phenomenon can occur in the waking state, when “the face is flushed, and the eyes are red, mostly when a man is afraid and his mind contemplates some evil act.”44

      The most famous Greek doctor, however, is Galen of Pergamon (130–210 CE), whose work remained deeply influential among medical professionals and other scholars, until late into the seventeenth century. Significantly, Galen did not pay much attention to the classification of disorders, or to discussions of diseases or syndromes.48 Instead, as was the case in the Hebrew Bible and the tradition of commentary standing on its shoulders, in The Passions and Errors of the Soul, Galen sees madness as the absence of the single defining human characteristic, that is, “the special gift of reason.”49

      Galen is also known to have emphasized what later became known as the “non-naturals”; six factors that affect the body and mind, but are not innate or part of the body itself. These six hygienic elements are the ambient air, food and drink, exercise and rest, sleep and wakefulness, excretion and retention, and the passions of the soul.52 All of these, according to Galen, need to be regulated and regimented for one to attain, maintain, or restore mental health.

      Just as he makes a distinction between animals that can be trained and those that cannot, Galen also differentiates between those whose madness is curable, and those that cannot be redeemed. As Thumiger shows, it is when Galen becomes “entirely materialistic and deterministic,” that he proposes the radical suggestion of killing those whose mental disturbance is due to such a severe damage to the body that it deems them “beyond redemption or cure.”53

      From this limited selection of Greco-Roman texts on madness, one can already clearly infer that when madness is regarded as part of a spectrum, on which it differs only quantitatively or relatively from sanity (i.e., as a result of having either too much or too little of the humors, in the biological interpretation, or too little reason and determination, insofar as the mental capacities are evaluated in their own right), the madman can be restored to health in body and mind. By contrast, the opposite conception of madness, as being caused by “severe damage to one’s bodily conditions” and affecting the very qualitative nature of one’s being, leads to the near-inevitable conclusion that madness, as such, is incurable. This is what, in turn, leads to the idea that the irredeemably mad person must be contained or set apart, cast out at best, or eliminated at worst.

      But whenever I was sick or depressed in my mind, the devil would begin to whisper that I would be damned because I had not confessed and been absolved of that secret sin. … All the while I saw, as I thought, devils opening their mouths as if to swallow me alive, their insides full of fire. They would sometime grab at me or utter threats; they would pull me around in the daytime and at night throughout all this length of time. These devils would call out loud to me; they continually terrified me with their cries telling me to leave the church, deny my faith, abandon God, his mother, and all the saints in heaven. (Margery Kempe, The Book of Margery Kempe, 26)54

      Being depressed in her mind, her body usurped, hearing voices, while deep down also terrified of being condemned to all-out damnation, Margery Kempe (1373–1458), whose personal account of her experience of madness opens this new segment of our cursory history, exemplifies the way madness was understood in the Middle Ages. Madness, we read here, is first and foremost a product of the multiple and diverse ways the connections between body, mind, and soul are individually and collectively experienced, culturally as well as theologically conceived of.

      The close interplay of religion and medicine, the demonic and the natural, affected the variety of (at times, overlapping) treatments for madness, from physical restraint to medication, and from psychological diversion to plain brutality or neglect. Claire Trenery, an expert on the representation of madness in the Middle Ages, and Peregrine Horden, a scholar of medieval medicine, distill some of the more common reactions to cases of madness from the extraordinarily complex field of forces at play during this period.55 The main signs of madness at the time were aberrations of thought, oddness of imagination, and suicidal behavior. The causes of madness were understood to be physiological (e.g., dietary), psychological (e.g., emanating from a morbid imagination), or belonging to the realm of the spirits (e.g., possession by a spirit, a demon, or divine providence). When contemporary experts of the period wrote about madness, many of them did not see these causes as mutually exclusive. According to them, the body could afflict the soul and the soul could damage the body, just as demons or God could use the body and soul to create a state of madness in mortals.

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