Re: Psychotherapy in science-fiction

From: Diego A. Mayer-Cantu (diego@purdue.edu)
Date: Tue May 18 1999 - 16:43:04 MDT


On Tue, 18 May 1999 Jfvirey@aol.com wrote:

> In many science-fiction novels, psychoses and neuroses are presented as a
> things of the past, and the humans of the future are shown to be much more
> sane and psychologically balanced than those of today.
>
> Has any good novel ever tried to envision what a psychotherapy of the future
> would look like, or what conditions would make this general increase in
> sanity possible?

In the Sci-Fi novel _Xenocide_, by Orson Scott Card, one of the characters
suffers from obsessive compulsive disorder. In the book, the citizens
consider actions related to this disorder "the will of the gods." This
book is the third book of a quartet, and I'm not sure you want to read
_Ender's Game_ and _Speaker of the Dead_ in order to understand some stuff
in this book (although they are both excellent books).

-- Diego
 



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