|
lunacy 音标拼音: [l'unəsi] n. 精神失常,精神病,大痴 精神失常,精神病,大痴 lunacy n 1: obsolete terms for legal insanity [ synonym: { lunacy}, { madness}, { insaneness}] 2: foolish or senseless behavior [ synonym: { folly}, { foolery}, { tomfoolery}, { craziness}, { lunacy}, { indulgence}] Lunacy \ Lu" na* cy\, n.; pl. { Lunacies}. [ See { Lunatic}.] 1. Insanity or madness; properly, the kind of insanity which is broken by intervals of reason, -- formerly supposed to be influenced by the changes of the moon; any form of unsoundness of mind, except idiocy; mental derangement or alienation. -- Brande. -- Burrill. [ 1913 Webster] Your kindred shuns your house As beaten hence by your strange lunacy. -- Shak. [ 1913 Webster] 2. A morbid suspension of good sense or judgment, as through fanaticism. -- Dr. H. More. Syn: Derangement; craziness; mania. See { Insanity}. [ 1913 Webster] 97 Moby Thesaurus words for " lunacy": aberration, abnormality, absurdity, alienation, asininity, battiness, brain damage, brainlessness, brainsickness, buffoonery, clouded mind, clownishness, crackpottedness, crankiness, craziness, daffiness, daftness, dementedness, dementia, derangement, desipience, disorientation, distraction, eccentricity, fatuity, fatuousness, folie, folly, foolery, foolhardiness, foolheadedness, foolishness, frivolity, frivolousness, furor, giddiness, goofiness, idiocy, illogic, illogicality, imbecility, inanity, ineptitude, insaneness, insanity, irrationality, loss of mind, loss of reason, madness, mania, mental deficiency, mental derangement, mental disease, mental disorder, mental disturbance, mental illness, mental instability, mental sickness, mind overthrown, mindlessness, mindsickness, niaiserie, nugacity, nuttiness, oddness, pixilation, possession, preposterousness, psychopathy, psychosis, queerness, rabidness, reasonlessness, ridiculousness, sappiness, screwiness, senselessness, shattered mind, sick mind, sickness, silliness, strangeness, stupidity, thoughtlessness, triflingness, triviality, unbalance, unbalanced mind, unsaneness, unsound mind, unsoundness, unsoundness of mind, wackiness, weirdness, witlessness, zaniness, zanyismLUNACY, med. jur. A disease of the mind, which is differently defined as it applies to a class of disorders, or only to one species of them. As a general term it includes all the varieties of mental, disorders, not fatuous. 2. Lunacy is adopted as a general term, on account of its general use as such in various legislative acts and legal proceedings, as commissions of lunacy, and in this sense it seems to be synonymous with non compos mentis, or of unsound mind. 3. In a more restricted sense, lunacy is the state of one who has bad understanding, but by disease, grief, or other accident, has lost the use of reason. 1 Bl. Com. 304. 4. The following extract from a late work, Stock on the Law of Non Compotes Mentis, will show the difficulties of discovering what is and what is not lunacy. " If it be difficult to find an appropriate definition or comprehensive name for the various species of lunacy," says this author, page 9, " it is quite as difficult to find anything approximating to a positive evidence of its presence. There are not in lunacy, as in fatuity, external signs not to be mistaken, neither is there that similarity of manner and conduct which enables any one, who has observed instances of idiocy or imbecility, to detect their presence in all subsequent cases, by the feebleness of perception and dullness of sensibility common to them all. The varieties of lunacy are as numerous as the varieties of human nature, its excesses commensurate with the force of human passion, its phantasies coextensive with the range of human intellect. It may exhibit every mood from the most serious to the most gay, and take every tone from the most sublime to the most ridiculous. It may confine itself to any trifling feeling or opinion, or overcast the whole moral and mental conformation. It may surround its victim with unreal persons and events, or merely cause him to regard real persons and events with an irrational favor or dislike, admiration or contempt. It may find satisfaction in the most innocent folly, or draw delight from the most atrocious crime. It may lurk so deeply as to elude the keenest search, or obtrude so openly as to attract the most careless notice. It may be the fancy of an hour, or the distraction of a whole life. Such being the fact, it is not surprising that many scientific and philosophical men have vainly exhausted their observation and ingenuity to find out some special quality, some peculiar mark or characteristic common to all cases of lunacy, which might serve at least as a guide in deciding on its absence or presence in individual instances. Being hopeless of a definition, they would willingly have contented themselves with a test, but even this the obscurity and difficulty of the subject seem to forbid. 5. Lord Erskine, who, in his practice at the bar, had his attention drawn this way, from being engaged in some of the most remarkable trials of his time involving questions of lunacy, has given as his test, " a delusive image, the inseparable companion of real insanity," ( Ersk. Misc. Speeches) and Dr. Haslam, whose opportunities of observation have surpassed most other persons, has proposed nearly the same, by saying that " false belief is the essence of insanity." ( Haslam on Insanity.) Sir John Nicholl, in his admirable judgment in the case of Dew v. Clark, thus expresses himself: " The true criterion is, where there is delusion of mind there is insanity; that is, when persons believe things to exist, which exist only, or at least, in that degree exist only in their own imagination, and of the non- existence of which neither argument nor proof can convince them; they are of unsound mind; or as one of the counsel accurately expressed it, it is only the belief of facts, which no rational person could have believed, that is insane delusion." ( Report by Haggard, p. 7.) Useful as these several remarks are, they are not absolutely true. It is indeed beyond all question that the great majority of lunatics indulge in some " delusive image," entertain some " false belief." They assume the existence of things or persons which do not exist, and so yield to a delusive image, or they come to wrong conclusions about persons and things which do exist, and so fall into a false belief. But there is a class of cases where lunacy is the result of exclusive indulgence in particular trains of thought or feeling, where these tests are sometimes wholly wanting, and yet where the entire absorption of the faculties in one predominant idea, the devotion of all the bodily and mental powers to one useless or injurious purpose, prove that the mind has lost its equilibrium. With some passions, indeed, such as self- esteem and fear, what was at first an engrossing sentiment, will often go on to a positive delusion; the self- adoring egotist grows to fancy himself a sovereign or a deity; the timid valetudinarian becomes the prey of imaginary diseases, the victim of unreal persecutions. But with many other passions, such as desire, avarice or revenge, the neglect and forgetfulness of all things save one, the insensibility to all restraints of reason, morality, or prudence, often proceed to such an extent as to justify holding an individual as a lunatic, incapable of all self- restraint, although, strictly speaking, not possessed by any delusive image or false belief. Much less do these tests apply to many cases of irresistible propensity to acts wholly irrational, such as to murder or to steal without the smallest assignable motive, which, rare as they are, certainly occur from time to time, and cannot but be held as an example of at least partial and temporary lunacy. It is to cases where no false belief or image can be detected, that the remark of Lord Erskine is more particularly applicable; " they frequently mock the wisdom of the wisest in judicial trials," ( Ersk. Misc. Speeches,) and were not the paramount object of all legal punishment the benefit of the community, which makes it inexpedient to spare offenders against the law, if insanity be the ground of their defence, except upon the clearest proof, lest skillful dissemblers should thereby be led to hope for impunity, very subtle questions might no doubt be raised as to the degree of moral responsibility and mental sanity attaching to the perpetrators of many atrocious acts, seeing that they often commit them tinder temptations quite inadequate to allure men of common prudence, or under passions so violent as to suspend altogether the operations of reason or free will. For as it is impossible to obtain an accurate definition of lunacy, so it is manifestly so, to draw the line correctly between it and its opposite rationality, or, to borrow the words of Chief Justice Hale, ( 1 Hale' s P. C. p. 30,) " Doubtless most persons that are felons, of themselves and others, are under a degree of partial insanity when they commit those offences. It is very difficult to define the indivisible line that divides perfect and partial, insanity; but it must rest on circumstances duly to be weighed and considered both by the judge and jury, lest on one side there be a kind of inhumanity towards the defects of human nature, or on the other side too great an indulgence given to great crimes."
|
安装中文字典英文字典查询工具!
中文字典英文字典工具:
英文字典中文字典相关资料:
- 【高中生物】尿素会排出体外 为什么还算作内环境成分? - 知乎
水会排出体外,为什么还算作 内环境 成分? 盐会排出体外,为什么还算作内环境成分? 氧气和二氧化碳会排出体外,为什么还算作内环境成分? ……好好想想,当我们在讨论使用“会不会排出体外”来区分内环境和外环境时,讨论的是液体而非成分吧?
- 为什么说尿素是人体内环境中的成分_百度知道
体液:机体含有大量的水分,这些水和溶解在水里的各种物质总称为体液,约占体重的60%。体液可分为两大部分:细胞内液和细胞外液。 内环境是由细胞外液组成的。
- 内环境成分都有什么? - 百度知道
体液包括细胞内液和细胞外液。 内环境定义:由细胞外液构成的液体环境 包括:血浆、组织液和淋巴 co2\o2\氢离子、尿素、血浆蛋白(血浆)、葡萄糖、钙离子、抗体(血浆)、激素(由血液输送到身体各处)、氨基酸、钠离子、水都在内环境中。 载体是细胞膜结构上有的蛋白质,呼吸氧化酶在细胞
- 内环境组成? - 知乎
体内各种组织细胞直接接触并赖以生存的环境称为 内环境 (internal environment)。 人体内的液体总称为体液(body fluid),约占体重的 60%。 内环境是指体内各种组织细胞直接接触并赖以生存的环境。 这里的关键点在于“直接接触”和“赖以生存”。
- 尿素为什么也是内环境成分??_百度知道
内环境定义:由细胞外液构成的液体环境 包括:血浆、组织液和淋巴 co2\o2\氢离子、尿素、血浆蛋白(血浆)、葡萄糖、钙离子、抗体(血浆)、激素(由血液输送到身体各处)、氨基酸、钠离子、水都在内环境中。 载体是细胞膜结构上有的蛋白质,呼吸氧化酶在细胞内部。这两个不属内环境。
- 氧气属于内环境成分吗 - 百度知道
氧气属于内环境成分吗选D 血红蛋白是红细胞的主要成份,并不属于血浆里的物质 红细胞是有运输氧气的功能,但氧气和二氧化碳的交换在内环境中,细胞从内环境中获取氧气,呼出的二氧化碳又排放到内环境中,所以氧气和二
- 尿素属于内环境吗 - 百度知道
尿素不属于内环境。尿素是细胞代谢产生的废弃物,需要通过血液运输,而内环境是细胞直接进行物质交换的场所,是细胞直接生活的环境,故尿素不属于内环境。尿素是在肝脏通过鸟氨酸循环合成,主要由肾脏排泄。由于尿素的分子量小又易于溶解,扩散力极大,故脑脊液、浆膜腔积液、唾液
- 都什么属于内环境物质??例如:激素,氨基酸,神经递质 . . .
1是位于突触小泡(或突触小体)中的神经递质,这个不属于内环境成分; 2是突触前膜释放的神经递质(位于组织液中),这个属于内环境成分。 其实这么考真没意义,因为上边的那几种也都可以这么分,但是高中生物它经常就是这么考的,谁都没办法。
- 氧气属于内环境吗? - 百度知道
氧气属于内环境吗?人体内环境指的是细胞生存的环境,就是细胞外液,由血浆,组织液和淋巴构成的一个可用来进行生命活动维持稳态等等作用的一个环境尿素和氧气 都可以在内环境中出现所以尿素和氧气是内环境的成分
- 尿素不属于于内环境 - 百度知道
尿素不属于于内环境,激素属于内环境。 尿素在肾脏中由血浆进入尿液之前都在细胞外液中。我们只能明确的说尿液不是内环境,但不能说尿素一定不属于内环境。 内环境是细胞直接进行物质交换的场所,是细胞直接生活的环境。 细胞代谢所需要的氧气和各种营养物质只能从内环境中摄取,而细胞
|
|