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A brief history of melancholy

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    Sadness is part of the human experience,
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    but for centuries there has
    been vast disagreement
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    over what exactly it is and what,
    if anything, to do about it.
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    In its simplest terms,
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    sadness is often thought of
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    as the natural reaction
    to a difficult situation.
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    You feel sad when a friend moves away
    or when a pet dies.
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    When a friend says, "I'm sad,"
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    you often respond by asking,
    "What happened?"
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    But your assumption that sadness
    has an external cause outside the self
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    is a relatively new idea.
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    Ancient Greek doctors didn't
    view sadness that way.
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    They believed it was a dark fluid
    inside the body.
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    According to their humoral system,
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    the human body and soul were controlled
    by four fluids, known as humors,
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    and their balance directly influenced
    a person's health and temperament.
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    Melancholia comes from
    melaina kole,
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    the word for black bile,
    the humor believed to cause sadness.
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    By changing your diet
    and through medical practices,
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    you could bring your humors
    into balance.
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    Even though we now know
    much more about the systems
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    that govern the human body,
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    these Greek ideas about sadness
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    resonate with current views,
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    not on the sadness we all
    occasionally feel,
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    but on clinical depression.
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    Doctors believe that certain
    kinds of long-term,
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    unexplained emotional states are at least
    partially related to brain chemistry,
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    the balance of various chemicals
    present inside the brain.
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    Like the Greek system,
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    changing the balance of these chemicals
    can deeply alter
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    how we respond to even extremely
    difficult circumstances.
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    There's also a long tradition
    of attempting to discern
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    the value of sadness,
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    and in that discussion,
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    you'll find a strong argument
    that sadness is not only
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    an inevitable part of life
    but an essential one.
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    If you've never felt melancholy,
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    you've missed out on part of
    what it means to be human.
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    Many thinkers contend that melancholy
    is necessary in gaining wisdom.
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    Robert Burton, born in 1577,
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    spent his life studying the causes
    and experience of sadness.
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    In his masterpiece
    "The Anatomy of Melancholy,"
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    Burton wrote, "He that increaseth wisdom
    increaseth sorrow."
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    The Romantic poets of
    the early 19th century
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    believed melancholy allows us to more
    deeply understand other profound emotions,
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    like beauty and joy.
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    To understand the sadness of the trees
    losing their leaves in the fall
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    is to more fully understand the cycle
    of life that brings flowers in the spring.
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    But wisdom and emotional intelligence seem
    pretty high on the hierarchy of needs.
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    Does sadness have value on
    a more basic, tangible,
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    maybe even evolutionary level?
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    Scientists think that crying
    and feeling withdrawn
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    is what originally helped our
    ancestors secure social bonds
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    and helped them get the support they needed.
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    Sadness, as opposed to anger or violence,
    was an expression of suffering
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    that could immediately bring people closer
    to the suffering person,
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    and this helped both the person
    and the larger community to thrive.
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    Perhaps sadness helped generate
    the unity we needed to survive,
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    but many have wondered whether
    the suffering felt by others
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    is anything like the suffering
    we experience ourselves.
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    The poet Emily Dickinson wrote,
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    "I measure every Grief I meet
    With narrow, probing Eyes -
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    I wonder if it weighs like MIne -
    Or has an Easier size."
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    And in the 20th century,
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    medical anthropologists,
    like Arthur Kleinman,
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    gathered evidence from the way
    people talk about pain
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    to suggest that emotions aren't
    universal at all,
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    and that culture, particularly the way
    we use language,
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    can influence how we feel.
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    When we talk about heartbreak,
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    the feeling of brokenness
    becomes part of our experience,
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    where as in a culture that talks
    about a bruised heart,
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    there actually seems to be a different
    subjective experience.
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    Some contemporary thinkers
    aren't interested
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    in sadness' subjectivity
    versus universality,
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    and would rather use technology to
    eliminate suffering in all its forms.
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    David Pearce has suggested
    that genetic engineering
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    and other contemporary processes
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    cannot only alter the way humans
    experience emotional and physical pain,
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    but that world ecosystems
    ought to be redesigned
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    so that animals don't suffer in the wild.
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    He calls his project
    "paradise engineering."
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    But is there something sad about
    a world without sadness?
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    Our cavemen ancestors and favorite poets
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    might not want any part
    of such a paradise.
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    In fact, the only things about sadness
    that seem universally agreed upon
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    are that it has been felt by most
    people throughout time,
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    and that for thousands of years,
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    one of the best ways we have to deal
    with this difficult emotion
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    is to articulate it, to try to express
    what feels inexpressable.
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    In the words of Emily Dickinson,
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    "'Hope' is the thing with feathers -
    That perches in the soul -
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    "And sings the tune without the words -
    And never stops - at all -"
Title:
A brief history of melancholy
Speaker:
Courtney Stephens
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:29

English subtitles

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