Abstract
Both geographically and historically, schizophrenia may have emerged from a psychosis that was more florid, affective, labile, shorter lived and with a better prognosis. It is conjectured that this has occurred with a reflexive self-consciousness in Western and globalising societies, a development whose roots lie in Christianity. Every theology also presents a psychology. Six novel aspects of Christianity may be significant for the emergence of schizophrenia—an omniscient deity, a decontexualised self, ambiguous agency, a downplaying of immediate sensory data, and a scrutiny of the self and its reconstitution in conversion. © 2013, SAGE Publications. All rights reserved.
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Littlewood, R., & Dein, S. (2013). Did Christianity lead to schizophrenia? Psychosis, psychology and self reference. Transcultural Psychiatry, 50(3), 397–420. https://doi.org/10.1177/1363461513489681
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