Literature DB >> 1743152

Joan of Arc.

E Foote-Smith1, L Bayne.   

Abstract

For centuries, romantics have praised and historians and scientists debated the mystery of Joan of Arc's exceptional achievements. How could an uneducated farmer's daughter, raised in harsh isolation in a remote village in medieval France, have found the strength and resolution to alter the course of history? Hypotheses have ranged from miraculous intervention to creative psychopathy. We suggest, based on her own words and the contemporary descriptions of observers, that the source of her visions and convictions was in part ecstatic epileptic auras and that she joins the host of creative religious thinkers suspected or known to have epilepsy, from St. Paul and Mohammed to Dostoevsky, who have changed western civilization.

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Year:  1991        PMID: 1743152     DOI: 10.1111/j.1528-1157.1991.tb05537.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Epilepsia        ISSN: 0013-9580            Impact factor:   5.864


  4 in total

1.  Women and epilepsy in the Mediterranean cultures.

Authors:  A Vanzan Paladin
Journal:  Ital J Neurol Sci       Date:  1997-08

Review 2.  Exaltation in temporal lobe epilepsy: neuropsychiatric symptom or portal to the divine?

Authors:  Niall McCrae; Rob Whitley
Journal:  J Med Humanit       Date:  2014-09

3.  Ecstatic and gelastic seizures relate to the hypothalamus.

Authors:  Kenney Roy Roodakker; Bisrat Ezra; Helena Gauffin; Francesco Latini; Maria Zetterling; Shala Berntsson; Anne-Marie Landtblom
Journal:  Epilepsy Behav Rep       Date:  2020-03-21

4.  Ecstatic and gelastic seizures related to the hypothalamus.

Authors:  Kenney Roy Roodakker; Bisrat Ezra; Helena Gauffin; Francesco Latini; Maria Zetterling; Shala Berntsson; Anne-Marie Landtblom
Journal:  Epilepsy Behav Rep       Date:  2020-11-05
  4 in total

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