Sunday, 14 June 2026

American writer Andrew Solomon explored the connection between mental illness and poverty in his book The Noonday Demon and his articles. He argued that poverty dramatically increases the risk of trauma and depression, often creating a cycle where the impoverished are unable to access psychiatric help. [1, 2, 3]

The Cycle of Depression and Impoverishment
Solomon highlighted the following key points regarding the intersection of poverty and mental health:
  • The Cycle of Bleakness: It is frequently misunderstood that poor individuals are depressed simply because their circumstances are grim. Solomon pointed out that the reverse is often true: their lives remain bleak because they are too depressed to seize control and improve their circumstances. [1]
  • High Rates and Underdiagnosis: Depression is ubiquitous among low-income and trauma-prone populations worldwide. Despite the severe prevalence, psychiatric disorders are highly underdiagnosed among the impoverished because they often fail to recognize their mental state as a treatable illness. [1, 2]
  • Systemic Neglect: In many public health and social services (such as Medicaid in the United States), mental health concerns among poor claimants are frequently dismissed by examiners as being an inevitable part of living in poverty. [1]
For a deep dive into how Andrew Solomon analyzes the history, politics, and treatment of mental health across different socioeconomic and cultural groups:

"Fortunately, Solomon had a doting father, brother, and a slew of friends who helped him get back to mental wellness".


"This is Copernicus in inner space: "you" revolve around your neural mood, and not vice versa"I" is indeed another . . . and one written in the opaque inks of biochemistry".


Saturday, 13 June 2026

 “People need to obtain self-esteem with the materials of this world, and it is other human beings who are the primary materials for the acquisition of self-esteem.”

Ernest Becker

“Everything that is formulated becomes more tolerable”



Emil Cioran

There is a profound, almost surgical relief in finding the right words for a formless weight. When a feeling or a systemic pressure remains unnamed, it tends to feel like an immutable law of nature—something that simply is.

Once you wrap language around it, however, you effectively drag it into the light. By formulating it, you achieve three specific shifts:

Boundary Setting: You define where the "problem" ends and where you begin. It stops being a pervasive atmosphere and starts being a discrete object that can be examined.

The Loss of Mystery: Horror often relies on the unseen. A formulated struggle loses its supernatural power; it becomes a mechanical or historical reality that has a beginning, a middle, and—theoretically—an end.

The Shift to Agency: You move from being the object that things happen to, to the subject who describes them. Even if the external reality hasn't changed, your relationship to it has shifted from passive endurance to active observation.

It is the difference between drowning in a fog and looking at a map of the coastline. The water is still cold, but at least you know which way the shore lies.

llm

Friday, 12 June 2026

 In "Cosmopolis and Depopulation" (a crucial chapter in the second volume of his 1922 magnum opus, The Decline of the West), Oswald Spengler outlines a chilling, cyclical theory of how great civilizations end.

His core thesis is that the rise of the "Megalopolis" (the giant, cosmopolitan world-city) acts as a biological parasite that drains the lifeblood of a culture, eventually resulting in systemic psychological and physical extinction (depopulation).

Spengler argues that the shift from an agrarian, rooted "Culture" to an urban, intellectualized "Civilization" is not progress, but a terminal diagnosis. The thesis unfolds across a few tightly linked concepts:

1. The Soul of the Land vs. The Intellect of the Stone

Spengler distinguishes between a young, vital Culture and an old, dying Civilization.

  • Culture is organic, religious, and rooted in the soil, the village, and the provincial town. It is where art, myth, and deep spiritual traditions are born.

  • Civilization begins when the "Cosmopolis" or world-city (think ancient Rome, Alexandria, or modern New York and Berlin) takes over. The city is a construct of pure stone, concrete, and intellect. It has no roots. It rejects the traditions of the motherland and replaces them with cold rationality, materialism, and the naked power of money.

2. The Rise of the "Nomad" Metropolit

As the Cosmopolis grows, it produces a new type of human: the intellectual, rootless urbanite. This person is entirely cut off from nature and tradition. Spengler describes them as a "new nomad." They are highly intelligent but spiritually dead, driven by utilitarianism, comfort, and scientific skepticism. The city consumer loses the capacity to believe in higher metaphysical truths, viewing the world purely through the lens of economic transactions and personal desires.

3. The "Biological Collapse" (Depopulation)

This is the ultimate climax of the chapter. Spengler asserts that the final stage of any civilization is marked by a sudden, catastrophic drop in birth rates. Crucially, he argues that this depopulation is not caused by economic hardship or material poverty, but by a metaphysical turn toward death.

In the world-city, the natural, cosmic impulse to continue the bloodline is broken by the intellect. Spengler explains this transformation through the changing perception of family:

  • In a living Culture: Children are a natural affirmation of life, a continuation of the ancestral line linked to the land.

  • In a dying Cosmopolis: Children are viewed through a cold, cost-benefit analysis. They become a "problem," an economic burden, and an obstacle to personal freedom or career ambition.

"The modern Intellectuality... is accompanied by a peculiar spiritual side-effect... it is an essentially metaphysical turn towards death. The transition from the rural mother-soil to the stone-mass of the Cosmopolis brings with it a loss of the metaphysical will-to-live."

4. The Final Dissolution

Once the metropolitan population stops reproducing, the entire structural pyramid of the civilization crumbles from the top down.

  1. The great world-cities begin to empty out.

  2. The remaining urban centers try to sustain themselves by sucking in the last remnants of the provincial, rural population.

  3. Eventually, the land itself is drained of its "best blood."

What remains at the very end of the cycle is what Spengler calls the "Fellah"—a primitive, ahistorical human residue. They live among the decaying, massive stone ruins of the forgotten megacities, entirely detached from the grand ideas that built them, returning to a simple, subsistence existence outside the gears of world history.

transcript

Speaker 1

Then there's democracy, but there's no name for a degraded democracy—at least, I don't think he gives one in The Politics. But to have that sort of informed citizenry, a demos that's educated enough to sustain a good democracy, requires some sort of moral grounding or foundation. I think Plato points to this, but in our modern idea of the liberal individual, there is no grounding; there is no direction. It's just, "do what you want as long as you're not breaking laws or interfering with the freedom of others."

Having no ideal, such as "the good," or even a moral foundation for how the populace should be educated is harmful and leads to the degradation of democracy.

I keep thinking of Nietzsche here. Nietzsche seems to be this great champion of the "will to be yourself." It doesn't matter, essentially, what you will to be, as long as you aspire to some sort of ideal, great version of yourself completely unbounded by any standard of goodness. There are nuances to how you read Nietzsche, but that's how a lot of people receive him. I think that kind of expresses our modern liberal ideal, which may be harmful to having a well-functioning democracy.

It also makes me think about what Simone Weil writes about education. She picks up on a Platonic theme regarding the necessity of a certain kind of education. For Weil, education is basically about the cultivation of attention. She actually posits that the best way to train your attention is to study things that you're not interested in. For example, studying math for the sake of math, but not necessarily out of any kind of love for it. She says that's actually better when it comes to training your attention. You have to dedicate yourself to the study, but your attention is best trained if you overcome your own inclinations.

In her view, the ultimate form of attention—what all training of attention prepares you for—is prayer. Prayer is the highest mode of attention in her view. But it's perhaps not prayer like we normally think about it; it's prayer as a kind of meditation, awaiting goodness and grace to enter into the void created through your kenosis—your self-emptying—when you're fully attentive to something.

I read about a priest who was a very good friend of Weil's. He said that when you talked with her, you had the distinct sense of a person who was fully attentive to everything you said and did. In that respect, she was walking the walk as well as talking the talk.

Pedro

It goes to the question of what education is actually for. Reminds me of being in academia now—it seems to become more and more about filling seats than anything else. It's a neoliberal model of education where we just fill as many seats as possible to make as much money as possible.

Because I wasn't alive at the time, I only hear stories about it, but there was a stronger sense in the United States that higher education possessed a distinct moral value. Its purpose was to educate "liberal individuals"—not liberal in the political left-or-right sense, but meaning free individuals who are capable of being responsible with their own freedom and educated to participate responsibly in the political process. That's the ideal of a liberal education as I understand it.

Today, that seems to be becoming more degraded in favor of an instrumental approach to education: "I got my degree, now I can just go get my job and do my own thing."

My worry with moving away from socially responsible forms of education and sliding down those standards is that we are sliding back toward a society like the one Plato warns about. If education just becomes another means to an end to get what I want and rise up the social ladder, it just develops more tyrannical personalities. Education becomes entirely about what it can do for me, or what I can take out of it.

Speaker 1

In my opinion, there's nothing more dehumanizing; all forms of dehumanization stem ultimately from that attitude toward education. If the soul is a process of formation itself, then education can't be a means to something else. Paideia, or Bildung—education—is the essence of human existence. It's how we become more fully human, and I don't think there is a final limit to that becoming.

Learning as a lifelong pursuit has to be the basis of any just society. The meaning of human life as such is education in the highest sense.

I think you've made quite an accurate diagnosis, Pedro, regarding the way education gets instrumentalized in our time as just a means to the end of getting a well-paying job. Even if education were understood as a means of creating a well-informed citizen who could participate in self-governance, that would still technically be instrumentalizing education to some degree—though it would be instrumentalizing it toward a much higher value than a purely economic one.

I think we need to reach even higher than that, toward something infinite like "the good." We'll never be done trying to become adequate to that transcendent good that Weil and Plato are trying to direct our attention toward. In the end, it definitely feels like it comes down to paideia.

I think one of the most common questions I get as a math teacher is, "What is this good for?" It's the one question that I don't want them to ask. A lot of my task is simply to make them stop asking that question, because if I try to answer it, it never helps. They don't get any more motivated.

Where I stir the most motivation in my students is actually when I start talking about some of the paradoxes surrounding the concept of infinity—things like Hilbert's Hotel or Cantor's analysis of transfinite numbers. They very often find that highly stimulating. Or, if I talk about the fact that they cannot actually see a triangle because of the way it's defined; it's not perceivable. They can think it, but they cannot see it.

When I put these kinds of paradoxes in front of them, I can feel that they are genuinely stimulated—much more so than if I try to explain to them what math is "good for" in the real world.

The human soul has need of disciplined participation in a common task of public value, and it has need of personal initiative within this participation.

The human soul has need of security and also of risk. The fear of violence or of hunger or of any other extreme evil is a sickness of the soul. The boredom produced by a complete absence of risk is also a sickness of the soul.

SW

American writer Andrew Solomon explored the connection between mental illness and poverty in his book The Noonday Demon and his articles. H...