Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychiatry, University of Social Welfare and Rehabilitation Sciences (USWR), Razi
Psychiatric Hospital, Tehran, Iran
Abstract
Abstract:
As stated by Jaspers, a delusion is a deviant assessment of reality that
is irredeemably believed. Therefore, while the delusions are apprehended with
the uncommon verdict and are not open to rationality, their irrationality or wrongness
is obvious to other persons. While Norman Cameron’s pseudo-community,
a supposed community of conspirators, was a historical description of conditions
that promote the development of delusional disorders, modern technology and advancement
of new communicative tools, like smartphone, hidden camera, satellite,
internet, and stealthy or scheming tricks or setups, like double-crossing and
masquerading scenarios, stressful circumstances, furtive or hectic arrangements,
creating a scene to deceive, hack, or tampering, have brought about the possibility
of a conspiracy by prejudiced or inimical people, which may amplify the conceivable
diagnostic faults by the perplexity of circumstances. On the other hand,
it is the duty of forensic and clinical psychiatrists to guess or discover any kind
of deceptive entrapment or simulation. In the present article, the said eccentricities,
which may have been accelerated by modern technology, have been discussed
briefly, especially with respect to paranoia and paranoid ideation. Moreover,
some clarifications for better demarcation of the discussed problem and
modification of operational definitions in the realm of psychopathology have
been suggested. Certainly, ample watchfulness by a clinical or forensic psychiatrist
for neutralizing a thinkable intrigue is an apposite performance for improving
civil rights and preventing preventable slips.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health