| | slovo | definícia |  | lunacy (encz)
 | lunacy,šílenství	n:		Zdeněk Brož |  | Lunacy (gcide)
 | 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]
 |  | lunacy (wn)
 | lunacy n 1: obsolete terms for legal insanity [syn: lunacy,
 madness, insaneness]
 2: foolish or senseless behavior [syn: folly, foolery,
 tomfoolery, craziness, lunacy, indulgence]
 |  | LUNACY (bouvier)
 | LUNACY, 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."
 
 
 | 
 | | podobné slovo | definícia |  | lunacy (encz)
 | lunacy,šílenství	n:		Zdeněk Brož |  | Commission of lunacy (gcide)
 | Commission \Com*mis"sion\, n. [F., fr. L. commissio. See Commit.]
 1. The act of committing, doing, or performing; the act of
 perpetrating.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Every commission of sin introduces into the soul a
 certain degree of hardness.           --South.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 2. The act of intrusting; a charge; instructions as to how a
 trust shall be executed.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 3. The duty or employment intrusted to any person or persons;
 a trust; a charge.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 4. A formal written warrant or authority, granting certain
 powers or privileges and authorizing or commanding the
 performance of certain duties.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Let him see our commission.           --Shak.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 5. A certificate conferring military or naval rank and
 authority; as, a colonel's commission.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 6. A company of persons joined in the performance of some
 duty or the execution of some trust; as, the interstate
 commerce commission.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 A commission was at once appointed to examine into
 the matter.                           --Prescott.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 7. (Com.)
 (a) The acting under authority of, or on account of,
 another.
 (b) The thing to be done as agent for another; as, I have
 three commissions for the city.
 (c) The brokerage or allowance made to a factor or agent
 for transacting business for another; as, a commission
 of ten per cent on sales. See Del credere.
 [1913 Webster]
 
 Commission of array. (Eng. Hist.) See under Array.
 
 Commission of bankruptcy, a commission appointing and
 empowering certain persons to examine into the facts
 relative to an alleged bankruptcy, and to secure the
 bankrupt's lands and effects for the creditors.
 
 Commission of lunacy, a commission authorizing an inquiry
 whether a person is a lunatic or not.
 
 Commission merchant, one who buys or sells goods on
 commission, as the agent of others, receiving a rate per
 cent as his compensation.
 
 Commission officer or Commissioned officer, (Mil.), one
 who has a commission, in distinction from a
 noncommissioned or warrant officer.
 
 Commission of the peace, a commission under the great seal,
 constituting one or more persons justices of the peace.
 [Eng.]
 
 on commission, paid partly or completely by collecting as a
 commision a portion of the sales that one makes.
 
 out of commission, not operating properly; out of order.
 
 To put a vessel into commission (Naut.), to equip and man a
 government vessel, and send it out on service after it has
 been laid up; esp., the formal act of taking command of a
 vessel for service, hoisting the flag, reading the orders,
 etc.
 
 To put a vessel out of commission (Naut.), to detach the
 officers and crew and retire it from active service,
 temporarily or permanently.
 
 To put the great seal into commission or {To put the
 Treasury into commission}, to place it in the hands of a
 commissioner or commissioners during the abeyance of the
 ordinary administration, as between the going out of one
 lord keeper and the accession of another. [Eng.]
 
 The United States Christian Commission, an organization
 among the people of the North, during the Civil War, which
 afforded material comforts to the Union soldiers, and
 performed services of a religious character in the field
 and in hospitals.
 
 The United States Sanitary Commission, an organization
 formed by the people of the North to cooperate with and
 supplement the medical department of the Union armies
 during the Civil War.
 
 Syn: Charge; warrant; authority; mandate; office; trust;
 employment.
 [1913 Webster]
 |  | lunacy (wn)
 | lunacy n 1: obsolete terms for legal insanity [syn: lunacy,
 madness, insaneness]
 2: foolish or senseless behavior [syn: folly, foolery,
 tomfoolery, craziness, lunacy, indulgence]
 |  | COMMISSION OF LUNACY (bouvier)
 | COMMISSION OF LUNACY, A writ issued out of chancery, or such court as may have jurisdiction of the case directed to a proper officer, to inquire
 whether a person named therein is a lunatic or not. 1 Bouv. Inst. n. 382, et
 seq.
 
 
 |  | LUNACY (bouvier)
 | LUNACY, 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."
 
 
 | 
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