John Shirley, who wrote some very dark and fucked-up post-cyberpunk scifi stories, has a Mental State of the Union, about the rise of mental illness of various sorts in our society, and the way that this is exacerbated by all sorts of things, from neurotoxins in the food chain to a generation of Ritalin kids to the dismantling of unprofitably expensive support networks for the mentally ill; he concludes with the suggestion that our society itself may be pervasively insane:
What is insanity? Among other things, it's the idea that we're immune to consequences. A madman thinks he's invulnerable -- at times when he's not being paranoid, as our Sane Leaders were in the McCarthy era. We think we can dump billions of pounds of toxins into ourselves -- and not have one in three people come down with cancer and one in five with a psychiatric disorder. We are insane as a society. We are far more asleep, more automatic, more mechanistic in our reactions, our behavior than we know -- and that is something psychiatry diagnoses as disassociation.
What if, as a society, we're far crazier than we realize? What if -- and that includes this magazine's hipster readership, each with his or her own set of conditioned psychological reflexes and insanely overblown vanities -- what if we're all truly -- not figuratively, but truly -- insane? We happen to be insane in a way that's functional, like a heroin addict who gets enough dope so he doesn't start screaming and manages to get through his day. But he knows his addiction in insanity. We're functional -- but insane.

Though that begs the question: was there ever a "sane" society? Did humanity or its ancestors once live in some primal arcadian utopia where everybody was sane, with insanity being a natural symptom of language/technology/urbanisation? Or is "sanity" itself (as defined above) on the scale of any society above a certain small size an impossible Platonic ideal, with human psychology being what it is?

It has been noted that the human brain can handle about 150 social relationships at any one time; any societies with more than that number of members require details to be abstracted away (Malcolm Gladwell mentions this in The Tipping Point). Perhaps any society that's not divided into autonomous units of 150 or fewer people automatically becomes "insane"?

Posted by: mark | http://donotuselifts.net/ | Wed Aug 27 14:18:22 2003

"Begs the question"? Aargh!

*quietly goes insane*

Posted by: Graham | http://grudnuk.com/ | Wed Aug 27 14:44:34 2003

At least he didn't say "hoist on his own petard" or "litany of woes".

Posted by: Jim | http:// | Thu Aug 28 07:16:11 2003

In our mad modern life I guess most of those 150 pigeonholes are taken up by dummy relationships with prominent members of the media - the President, the news reader, some amorphous reporter personality, chat show hosts, various film stars, music identities, and soapie characters. Anyone else who sticks their head in gets relegated to the road rage department.

Posted by: Graham | http://grudnuk.com/ | Thu Aug 28 10:26:50 2003

I once tried to write a song with the line "Everyone I know is famous"...

Posted by: mark | http://donotuselifts.net/ | Thu Aug 28 10:58:38 2003

What happened?

Posted by: Graham | http://grudnuk.com/ | Thu Aug 28 16:20:24 2003

Oh yeah. Well, that was around about the time when I found out I was shit at writing lyrics. But it was along the lines of I'm a lonely bastard who watches the TV a lot.

Posted by: kat | http:// | Fri Aug 29 07:17:31 2003

(i) Check out Quantity Theory of Insanity by Will Self (ii) There's a fairly cultural analysis of schizophrenia that's a bit too Darwinian for my liking but which talks about left brain and right brain, and the lapse in communication which = schizophrenia as being a potential loss 'we' (humans) had to make to evolve in other ways...

Posted by: acb | http://dev.null.org | Fri Aug 29 08:34:04 2003

The Quantity Theory of Insanity is my favourite piece of Will Self's writing. In fact, it's the only one I really like; the rest seems a bit too druggy.

Posted by: kat | http:// | Mon Sep 1 01:32:09 2003

I like Ward 9 in the same book, like that idea of 'insane' being a 'sane' response to constuctions of sanity/insanity.

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