ANIMAL
INTELLIGENCE AND MORE
Compiled By
Comrade TJ
Satanists, as a
rule, accept that man is just another kind of animal,
subject to the same things that other animals are subject
to. Satanists accept that animals can think and feel,
just like humans can. Many Satanic readers already know
about animal intelligence, cats, dogs, etc., and some
even know about insect intelligence; but what about this?
Words that I want you to focus on and put to the
forefront are in capitalized letters for a reason: these
are words defining things normally attributed to human
intelligence, planning, etc.
Worms
Let us look at
Sabella and Owenia. This article brought a smile to many
readers when it was first posted.
Sabella CONSTRUCTS a home that is shaped like a tube.
Sabella constructs the tube of sand grains imbedded in
mucus. Sabella SORTS detritus she COLLECTS and sand
grains of SUITABLE SIZE. That is, Sabella has to
determine which grains are suitable and which are not and
be able to sort them out properly and determine size
properly: not too big, not too small. She also has to be
well AWARE that she is collecting all of this in order to
construct a home she PLANS to live in. The sorted
detritus and right-sized sand grains are STORED. She is
AWARE that she is storing these for later use. Later, the
sand is mixed with mucus. When and if additions to the
tube (size of home) are to be made, Sabella produces a
rope-like string of mucus mixed with sand. Surely, she
doesn't wait until the last minute to DECIDE whether or
not to add to the tube-home. She then rotates slowly: not
too fast, but not TOO slow; just at the right speed.
Collar folds she has act LIKE A PAIR OF HANDS, molding
and attaching the rope to the end of the tube. She has to
mold them properly and attach them all the right way. All
of this is quite similar to the Indian method of pottery
making.
Owenia, on the
other hand, lives like a nomad with a movable home. She
carries her tube around and uses the chimney-end of the
tube like a screw. Flexibility in her tube is attained by
the use of flat sand grains, attached at one edge and
overlapping adjacent grains of sand. It resembles tile
roofing. Most people born into the world without being
taught, would be hard put to BUILD a home for themselves.
They'd not know how much to mix, what to mix, how to
apply, how to attach or shape it, nor would most humans
have the FORESIGHT to store materials for building such a
thing as a home. And even when taught, most humans do a
LOUSY job of planning and/or building: FEW among them
know how to do this without being taught by rote. NO ONE
taught Sabella or Owenia. They either figured it out on
their own or they'd PERISH.
Sabella and Owenia
are polychaete annelids; i.e., WORMS.
* * * * * * * * *
* * * * * * * * * * *
Do Rats Ever Like
Cats?
A protozoan (single
celled eukaryote organism, not a bacteria) that infects
rats dims their wariness around cats and can even lead to
"fatal attraction!" (Oxford researchers).
That's really bad
for a rat to be attracted to a cat but it's great for
this protozoan parasite. The protozoan, "Toxoplasma
gondii," needs to jump from the rat to the cat to
complete ITS life cycle. The rat's getting caught by a
cat fits the parasite's agenda, but certainly is not good
for the rat at all (Proceedings of The Royal Society:
Biological Sciences, August 7 2000). Put this into a
human frame and you can imagine the rat's brothers
probably thinking, "Gee, that rat is self
destructive, I wonder why our fellow rat is acting so
crazy: maybe that rat had a bad upbringing or something?
They might even think that the rat is acting like a
peacenik or a liberal. :)
The infected rats
respond to the cat odor. Normal rats avoid places where
cat odor is present. Infected rats not only lose their
wariness, but even PREFER cat fragrance. The rat's
personality change shows the clearest example yet of a
parasite manipulating the victimized MAMMAL, manipulating
its behavior, even its ability to logically think: "CAT
IS HERE, LET ME GET OUT OF HERE FAST!"
This parasite can
infect many types of mammals but it reproduces in only a
few. In humans, a latent infection can flair up and cause
mental decline. Low grade infections may result in more
subtle effects, such as odd behavior and perhaps IQ dips.
The researchers estimate that the parasite infects 22% of
the United Kingdom's residents and 88% of the French. (Science
News, August 12, 2000, p 109). What else does this
infection make humans do?
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* *
Do Parasites Rule? (Another look
at "free will")
And now for the
mind-boggler of them all: STRATEGIES that humans can't
even hope to compete with; and please note, they are not
"yang" strategies; they are "yin."
This article will not make you smile: it might terrify
you.
Excerpts from this
article that are pertinent (no fluff) are here and notes
to focus your attention are added in ( ) or indicated by
the word "Note:" before my note is written.
From DISCOVER Vol.
21 No. 8 (August 2000)
"Do Parasites
Rule the World? New evidence indicates our idea of how
nature really works could be wrong." By Carl Zimmer
On a clear summer
day on the California coast, the carpinteria salt marsh
vibrates with life. Along the banks of the 120-acre
preserve, 80 miles northwest of Los Angeles, thousands of
horn snails, their conical shells looking like miniature
party hats, graze the algae. Arrow gobies slip through
the water, while killifish dart around, every now and
then turning to expose the brilliant glint of their
bellies. Fiddler crabs slowly crawl out of fist-size
holes and salute the new day with their giant claws,
while their bigger cousinslined-shore crabs
crack open snails as if they were walnuts. Meanwhile, a
carnival of birds Caspian terns, willet, plover,
yellowleg sandpipers, curlews, and dowitchers feast
on littleneck clams and other prey burrowed in the marsh
bottom.
Standing on a
promontory, Kevin Lafferty, a marine biologist at the
University of California at Santa Barbara, watches the
teeming scene and sees another, more compelling drama.
For him, the real drama of the marsh lies beneath the
surface in the life of its invisible inhabitants: the
parasites. A curlew grabs a clam from its hole. "Just
got infected," Lafferty says. He looks at the bank
of snails. "More than 40 percent of these snails are
infected," he pronounces. "They're really just
parasites in disguise." (I.e., they LOOK like
snails, but they behave in accordance with, and for the
benefit of the PARASITE.) He points to the snowy
constellation of bird droppings along the bank. "There
are boxcars of parasite biomass here; those are just
packages of fluke eggs."
Every living thing
has at least one parasite that lives inside or on it, and
many, including humans, have far more. Leopard frogs may
harbor a dozen species of parasites, including nematodes
in their ears, filarial worms in their veins, and flukes
in their kidneys, bladders, and intestines. One species
of Mexican parrot carries 30 different species of mites
on its feathers alone. Often the parasites themselves
have parasites, and some of those parasites have
parasites of their own. Scientists have no idea of the
exact number of species of parasites, but they do know
one fact: Parasites make up the majority of species on
Earth. Parasites can take the form of animals, including
insects, flatworms, and crustaceans, as well as protozoa,
fungi, plants, and viruses and bacteria. By one estimate,
parasites may outnumber free-living species four to one.
Indeed, the study of life is, for the most part,
parasitology.
Most of the past
century's research on parasites has gone into trying to
fight the ones that cause devastating illness in humans,
such as malaria, AIDS, and tuberculosis. But otherwise,
parasites have largely been neglected. Scientists have
treated them with indifference, even contempt, viewing
them as essentially hitchhikers on life's road. But
recent research reveals that parasites are remarkably
sophisticated and tenacious and may be as important to
ecosystems as the predators at the top of the food chain.
Some castrate their hosts and take over their minds.
(!!!!!) (Read that LITERALLY, not as a metaphor.) Others
completely shut down the immune systems of their hosts.
Some scientists now think parasites have been a dominant
force, perhaps the dominant force, in the evolution of
life. (How about connecting this to the Tree of
Destruction!!)
Note: consider
also, the parasite would make the hosts DO things in
relation to others of the host's species! The
implications are HUGE. In other words, they could make
humans behave toward other humans in a way that would
benefit the parasite, not benefit the human except
perhaps in terms of making it pleasurable for the human
so that the human would continue to do it. A virus can
also do this: the sneeze aids the adenovirus in
spreading; the sneeze is a human behavior that co-evolved
with the virus! What about retroviruses? They can alter
your DNA - but what ELSE can they do? Well, they have a
Will to Spread.
Sacculina carcini,
a barnacle that morphs into plantlike roots, is not the
kind of organism that commands immediate respect. Indeed,
at first glance Sacculina appears to slide down the
ladder of evolution during its brief lifetime. Biologists
are just beginning to realize that this backward-looking
creature is a powerhouse in disguise.
Sacculina starts
life as a free-swimming larva. Through a microscope, the
tiny crustacean looks like a teardrop equipped with
fluttering legs and a pair of dark eyespots. Nineteenth-century
biologists thought Sacculina was a hermaphrodite, but in
fact it comes in two sexes. The female larva is the first
to colonize its host, the crab. Sense organs on the
female Sacculina's legs catch the scent of a crab, and
she dances through the water until she lands on its armor.
She crawls along an arm as the crab twitches in
irritation or perhaps the crustacean equivalent of
panic until she comes to a joint on the arm where
the hard exoskeleton bends at a soft chink. There she
looks for the small hairs that sprout out of the crab's
arm, each anchored in its own hole. She jabs a long
hollow dagger through one of the holes, and through it
squirts a blob made up of a few cells. The injection,
which takes only a few seconds, is a variation on the
molting that crustaceans and insects go through in order
to grow. For example, a cicada sitting in a tree
separates a thin outer husk from the rest of its body and
then pushes its way out of the shell, emerging with a
new, soft exoskeleton that stretches throughout the
insect's growth spurt. In the case of the female
Sacculina, however, most of her body becomes the husk
that is left behind. The part that lives on looks less
like a barnacle than like a microscopic slug.
The slug plunges
into the depth of the crab. In time it settles in the
crab's underside and grows, forming a bulge in its shell
and sprouting a set of rootlike tendrils, which spread
throughout the crab's body, even wrapping around its
eyestalks. Covered with fine, fleshy fingers much like
the ones lining the human intestine, these roots draw in
nutrients dissolved in the crab's blood. Remarkably, this
gross invasion fails to trigger any immune response in
the crab, which continues to wander through the surf,
eating clams and mussels.
Meanwhile, the
female Sacculina continues to grow, and the bulge in the
crab's underside turns into a knob. As the crab scuttles
around, the knob's outer layer slowly chips away,
revealing a portal. Sacculina will remain at this stage
for the rest of her life, unless a male larva lands on
the crab and finds the knob's pin-size opening. It's too
small for him to fit into, and so, like the female before
him, he molts off most of himself, injecting the vestige
into the hole. This male cargo a spiny, reddish-brown
torpedo 1/100,000 inch long slips into a pulsing,
throbbing canal, which carries him deep into the female's
body. He casts off his spiny coat as he goes and in 10
hours ends up at the bottom of the canal. There he fuses
to the female's visceral sac and begins making sperm.
There are two of these wells in each female Sacculina,
and she typically carries two males with her for her
entire life. They endlessly fertilize her eggs, and every
few weeks she produces thousands of new Sacculina larvae.
Eventually, the
crab begins to change into a new sort of creature, one
that exists to serve the parasite. (!!! yet consider, it
still LOOKS like a crab.) It can no longer do the things
that would get in the way of Sacculina's growth. It stops
molting and growing, which would funnel away energy from
the parasite. Crabs can typically escape from predators
by severing a claw and regrowing it later on. Crabs
carrying Sacculina can lose a claw, but they can't grow a
new one in its place. And while other crabs mate and
produce new generations, parasitized crabs simply go on
eating and eating. They have been spayed by the parasite.
(In other words, they no longer have the DESIRE to mate
with their own kind!)
Despite having
been castrated (not literally, but the desire to mate is
gone), the crab doesn't lose its urge to nurture. It
simply directs its affection toward the parasite. (Consider
this in HUMAN terms.) A healthy female crab carries her
fertilized eggs in a brood pouch on her underside, and as
her eggs mature she carefully grooms the pouch, scraping
away algae and fungi. When the crab larvae hatch and need
to escape, their mother finds a high rock on which to
stand, then bobs up and down to release them from the
pouch into the ocean current, waving her claws to stir up
more flow. The knob that Sacculina forms sits exactly
where the crab's brood pouch would be, and the crab
treats the parasite knob as such. She strokes it clean as
the larvae grow, and when they are ready to emerge she
forces them out in pulses, shooting out heavy clouds of
parasites. As they spray out from her body, she waves her
claws to help them on their way. Male crabs succumb to
Sacculina's powers as well. Males normally develop a
narrow abdomen, but infected males grow abdomens as wide
as those of females, wide enough to accommodate a brood
pouch or a Sacculina knob. A male crab even acts as if he
had a female's brood pouch, grooming it as the parasite
larvae grow and bobbing in the waves to release them. (Males
behave like females.)
Sacculina's
adaptations reflect a relatively simple life cycle for a
parasite it makes its way from one crab to another.
But for many other parasites, the game is more
complicatedthey must journey through a series of
animal species in order to survive and procreate. Such
parasites exert extraordinary control over their hosts,
transforming them into seemingly different creatures.
They can change a host's looks or scent to appeal to a
predator. They can even alter its behavior to force it
into the next host's path. (Could it also change the
creature's behavior in a way where it would induce OTHERS
of its own species to succumb to the parasite? Yes.)
The mature lancet
fluke, Dicrocoelium dendriticum, nestles in cows and
other grazers, which spread the fluke's eggs in their
manure. Hungry snails swallow the eggs, which hatch in
their intestines. The immature parasites drill through
the wall of a snail's gut and settle in the digestive
gland. There the flukes produce offspring, which make
their way to the surface of the snail's body. The snail
tries to defend itself by walling the parasites off in
balls of slime, which it then coughs up and leaves behind
in the grass.
Along comes an
ant, which swallows a slime ball loaded with hundreds of
lancet flukes. The parasites slide down into the ant's
gut and then wander for a while through its body,
eventually moving to the cluster of nerves that control
the ant's mandibles. Most of the lancet flukes head back
to the abdomen, where they form cysts, but one or two
stay behind in the ant's head.
There the flukes
do some parasitic voodoo on their hosts. As the evening
approaches and the air cools, the ants find themselves
drawn away from their fellows on the ground and upward to
the top of a blade of grass. Clamped to the tip of the
blade, the infected ant waits to be devoured by a cow or
some other grazer passing by. (It elicits what we'd call
Thanatos behavior, self-destructive behavior!)
If the ant sits
the whole night without being eaten and the sun rises,
the flukes let the ant loosen its grip on the grass. The
ant scurries back down to the ground and spends the day
acting like a regular insect again. If the host were to
bake in the heat of the direct sun, the parasites would
die with it. When evening comes again, they send the ant
back up a blade of grass for another try. After the ant
finally tumbles into a cow's stomach, the flukes burst
out and make their way to the cow's liver, where they
will live out their lives as adults.
As scientists
discover more and more parasites and uncover the extent
and complexity of their machinations, they are fast
coming to an unsettling conclusion: Far from simply being
along for the ride, parasites may be one of nature's most
powerful driving forces. At the Carpinteria salt marsh,
Kevin Lafferty has been exploring how parasites may shape
an entire region's ecology. In a series of exacting
experiments, he has found that a single species of fluke
Euhaplorchis californiensis journeys through three
hosts and plays a critical role in orchestrating the
marsh's balance of nature.
Birds release the
fluke's eggs in their droppings, which are eaten by horn
snails. The eggs hatch, and the resulting flukes castrate
the snail and produce offspring, which come swimming out
of their host and begin exploring the marsh for their
next host, the California killifish. Latching onto the
fish's gills, the flukes work their way through fine
blood vessels to a nerve, which they crawl along to the
brain. They don't actually penetrate the killifish's
brain but form a thin carpet on top of it, looking like a
layer of caviar. There the parasites wait for the fish to
be eaten by a shorebird. When the fish reaches the bird's
stomach, the flukes break out of the fish's head and move
into the bird's gut, stealing its food from within and
sowing eggs in its droppings to be spread into marshes
and ponds.
In his research,
Lafferty set out to answer one main question: Would
Carpinteria look the same if there were no flukes? He
began by examining the snail stage of the cycle. The
relationship between fluke and snail is not like the one
between predator and prey. In a genetic sense, infected
snails are dead, because they can no longer reproduce. (i.e.,
an animal that does not reproduce is genetically dead.)
But they live on, grazing on algae to feed the flukes
inside them. That puts them in direct competition with
the marsh's uninfected snails.
To see how the
contest plays out, Lafferty put healthy and fluke-infested
snails in separate mesh cages at sites around the marsh.
"The tops were open so the sun could shine through
and algae could grow on the bottom," says Lafferty.
What he found was that the uninfected snails grew faster,
released far more eggs, and could thrive in far more
crowded conditions. The implication: In nature, the
parasites were competing so intensely that the healthy
snails couldn't reproduce fast enough to take full
advantage of the salt marsh. In fact, if flukes were
absent from the marsh, the snail population would nearly
double. That explosion would ripple out through much of
the salt marsh ecosystem, thinning out the carpet of
algae and making it easier for the snails' predators,
such as crabs, to thrive.
Lafferty then
studied the killifish. Initially, he found little
evidence that flukes harmed or changed the fish they
colonized; the fish didn't even mount an immune response.
But Lafferty was suspicious. He figured that flukes
sitting on the brain were in a good position to be doing
something. So he plucked 42 fish from the marsh, dumped
them into a 75-gallon aquarium in the lab, and gave his
student Kimo Morris the laborious task of watching them.
Morris would pick out one fish and stare at it for half
an hour, recording every move it made. When he was done,
he'd scoop the fish out and dissect it to see whether its
brain was caked with parasites. Then he'd focus on
another killifish.
What was hidden to
the naked eye came leaping out of the data. As killifish
search for prey, they alternate between hovering and
darting around. But every now and then, Morris would spot
a fish shimmying, jerking, flashing its belly as it swam
on one side, or darting close to the surface all
risky things for a fish to do if a bird is scanning the
water. It turns out that fish with parasites were four
times more likely to shimmy, jerk, flash, and surface
than their healthy counterparts.
Lafferty and
Morris followed up with a marsh experiment in which they
set up two pens, each filled with 53 uninfected killifish
and 95 infected fish. To distinguish between the two
groups, the researchers clipped the left pectoral fin of
the healthy fish and the right fin of the parasitized
ones. One pen was covered with netting to protect it from
birds; the other was left open so birds could easily wade
or land inside. After two days, a great egret waded into
the open pen. It stepped slowly into the muddy water and
struck it a few times, the last time bringing up a
killifish. After birds had visited the pen for three
weeks, Lafferty and Morris added up how many fish were
alive. (The covered pen acted as a control for the
researchers to see how many fish died of natural causes.)
The results were startling: The birds were 30 times more
likely to feast on one of the flailing, parasitized fish
than on a healthy fish.
Predators are
often very careful about the prey they eat, avoiding
poisonous insects and frogs, for example. So why would
birds pick so many fish that are guaranteed to pass on an
energy-sucking intestinal parasite? The flukes do drain a
bit of energy from the birds. But that is more than
offset by the benefit they provide: They make finding
food very easy for the birds.
Scientists have
been stunned by the implications of these findings.
Note: Here is an
example that I intend to use to get you upset :)
Actually, to make you THINK STRONGLY about it. Let us
take humans that use the digestive canal (mouth OR anus)
for sexual pleasure and obsess over that? They desire far
MORE sex of that nature than do "normals" or
mating male/female types. Maybe it has nothing to do with
mental fetishes or upbringing or anything human-centered
at all. Ask this: What's in the digestive tract? LOTS of
parasites, bacteria, etc. This is a non-mating act that
is DESIRED over and above the mating act: but WHO is
doing the desiring? The human? Or Something Else? What
OTHER behaviors are strange? What about self-destructive
stuff? Is the human destroying himself due to some
psychological reason, or is Something Else surviving and
benefiting its own species when its human host does these
things? It would explain a LOT.
The birds that
frequent coastal wetlands depend on fish for much of
their diet. Without parasites throwing prey their way,
the birds of Carpinteria might have to put far more time
and effort into eating and might reproduce at a lower
rate. "Could we have so many birds out there if it
were 30 times harder for them to get their food?"
asks marine biologist Armand Kuris, also of the
University of California at Santa Barbara. "Parasites
don't just modify individual behavior, they're really
powerful they may be running a large part of the
waterbird ecology."
The fluke that
Lafferty studied is but one parasite, living in one salt
marsh. There are a dozen other species of fluke that live
in the snails of Carpinteria and other parasites that
dwell in other animals of the marsh. Every ecosystem on
Earth is just as rife with parasites that can exert
extraordinary control over their hosts, riddling them
with disease, castrating them, or transforming their
natural behavior.
Note: repeat this:
They can exert extraordinary control over their hosts,
castrating them (not literally, just ensuring that they
don't reproduce their own kind anymore, ensuring that
they don't even DESIRE to reproduce their own kind!), or
transforming their NATURAL behavior.
Scientists like
Lafferty are only just beginning to discover exactly how
powerful these hidden inhabitants can be, but their
research is pointing to a remarkable possibility:
Parasites may rule the world.
The notion that
tiny creatures we've largely taken for granted are such a
dominant force is immensely disturbing. Even after
Copernicus took Earth out of the center of the universe
and Darwin took humans out of the center of the living
world, we still go through life pretending that we are
exalted above other animals. Yet we know that we, too,
are collections of cells that work together, kept
harmonized by chemical signals. If an organism can
control those signals an organism like a parasite
then it can control us. And therein lies the peculiar and
precise horror of parasites.
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* *
And finally:
Lambs do not lay
down near lions unless they are crazy (of something else
wants them to lay down near the lion?) And the only lions
that lay down with lambs either just had a good meal or
are laying down as dead lions.
So then, what
would make HUMANS prone to severe religiosity that way?
Borna Virus is one indicator.
Excerpts from
Andrei A. V.'s paper on Borna Virus and religious
psychopathology:
The evidence of
links between hyper-religiosity, hyper-moralism,
prevalence of "ethics" over logic, mystical
experiences and well - researched psychopathological
conditions such as schizophrenia and, especially,
temporal epilepsy, mounts every passing hour. Listing all
well - supported arguments in the field of
neuropathological evaluation of religious behavior is a
tedious task - this particular topic deserves a book on
it's own, consisting of multiple volumes outlining
different methodological approaches to this problem.
Instead, the interested reader is referred to a list of
references on neuropathology of religiosity provided with
this article. Perhaps, the most comprehensive reference
on the list is "The Neuronal Substrates of Religious
Experience" by J. L. Saver (M. D.) and J. Rabin (M.
D.). If you can get hold of it - get it.
The first question
is "how does Borna Virus enter the body?" It
may be transmitted from mother to an embryo. It can be
passed from rodents by ticks, as it was already mentioned.
But the main way of dissemination is inhalational.
Literally, it is sniffed in and gets into the olfactory
nerves. After getting into the nerves it travels inside
of them deep into the brain, where it starts multiplying.
And where do the olfactory nerves lead ? What is "the
nose brain" that perceives and processes the
information we get in the form of various smells ? The
"nose brain" (or rhinenecephalon) consists of
olfactory bulbs, AMYGDALA and HIPPOCAMPUS. In fact,
hippocampus (or, at least it's first-to-appear dorsal
part ("the one on the back side") had EVOLVED
from the olfactory bulbs.
It is hippocampus
and amygdala (which is less sensitive to insults &
injuries than the hippocampus) where the virus enters the
brain first, employs it as a breeding ground and, as time
passes, wrecks havoc. The direct link from the outside
environment to the most sensitive/fragile part of the
human brain via the olfactory nerve is a clear-cut "exploit,"
and it comes as no surprise that once upon a time there
came a microscopic invader which used that weak spot to
its benefit and caused trouble for the whole mankind !
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
* *
References:
a) Scrip
Industrial Report. BS 696. Schizophrenia/Manic depression.
1994.
b) Neuropsyhiatry.
Fogel at al. , Williams and Wilkins, 1996.
Cortical
Plasticity : LTP and LTD. Fazeli&Collingridge. Bios
1996.
c) Jeffrey L.
Saver & John Rabin, The Neural Substrates of
Religious Experience. The Journal of neuropsychiatry,
special issue : the neuropsychiatry of limbic and
subcortical disorders. Vol 9, Number 3, Summer 1997, pp.
498 - 510. (Highly recommended)
d) Waller et al,
Genetic and Environmental influences on religious
interests, attitudes and values: a study of twins reared
apart and together. Journal of Psychological Science,
1990, 1: 138 - 142 (that twin method ! :-)
e) Hardy A. The
Biology of God. New York, Taplinger, 1975.
f) Devinskiy O,
Luciano D. Psychic phenomena in partial seizures.
Seminars of Neurology, 1991; 11 : 100 - 109.
g) Gloor P. ,
Oliver A. , Quesney L. F. et al. The role of the limbic
system in experimental phenomena of temporal lobe
epilepsy. Ann. Neurol. 1982; 23: 129 - 144.
h) Voskuil P. H. A.
The epilepsy of Dostoevskiy. Epilepsia 1983 ; 24 : 658 -
667.
i) Stevens J. R.
Mark V. H. Ervin F et al. , Deep Temporal Stimulation in
Man. Arch. Neurology, 1969; 21:157 - 169.
j) Dewhurst K. ,
Beard A. V. Sudden religious conversions in temporal lobe
epilepsy. British Journal of Psychiatry 1970; 117: 497 -
507.
k) Waxman S. G. ,
Geschwind N. The interictal behaviour syndrome of
temporal lobe epilepsy. Arch. Gen. Psychiatry, 1975; 32:1580
- 1586.
l) Senskiy T,
Wilson A, Petty R et al, The interictal personality
traits of temporal lobe epileptics: religious belief and
its association with reported mystical experiences. In
Advances of Epileptology, New York, 1984; pp. 545 - 549.
m) Serafetinides E.
A. The significance of the temporal lobes and of
hemisphere dominance in the production of the LSD - 25
symptomatology in man. Neuropsychologia, 1965; 95:53 - 63.
n) Delusional
Beliefs. Ottmans T. F and Maher B. A. New York, Wiley,
1988.
o) Psychiatry and
Religion: Overlapping Concerns. Edited by Robinson D. H.
American Psychiatric Press, 1986.
p) Von Damirus.
The specific laws of logic in schizophrenia. In Language
and Thought in Schizophrenia, edited by J. S. Kasanin,
University of California Press, 1944, pp 30 - 44.
q) Aggleton J. P.
The contribution of amygdala to normal and abnormal
emotional states. TINS, 1993, 16: 328 - 333.
r) Lex B. W. The
neurobiology of ritual trance. In The Spectrum of Ritual,
edited by D'Aquili et al, New York, Columbia University
Press, 1979, pp 117 - 151.
s) Landsborough D.
St. Paul and temporal lobe epilepsy. J. Neurol.
Neurosurgery and Psychiatry. 1987, 50: 659 - 664.
t) Buckley P.
Mystical experiences and schizophrenia. Schizophrenia
Bulletin, 1981; 7: 516 - 521.
u) Mysticism:
Spitiual Quest or Psychic Disorder ? Group for the
Advancements of Psychiatry, New York, Mental Health
Materials Center, 1976, Vol 9 publication 97.
v) R. Joseph.
Neuropsychiatry, Neurpsychology and Clinical Neurscience:
Emotion, Evolution, Cognition, Language, Memory, Brain
Damage and Abnormal Behaviour. Second Edition, Williams
& Wilkins, 1996. (Reccommended as both general and
more specific source)
There is also an
interesting paper written by a schizophrenic patient
turned to Christianity thus worsening the disease :
Schizophrenia Bulletin Vol. 23, No 3, 1997.
Other related/useful
references in this field:
Brain mechanisms
and psychotropic drugs. Gary Remington. CRS press. 1996.
Different updates
of the DSM - 4 scale. (Well, you know what is it . . . )
The Brain and
Emotion. Edmund T. Rolls, Oxford University Press, 1999.
(Exellent!)
The Brain and
Behavior. Assessing Cortical Dysfunction Through
Activities of Daily Living. Gudrun Arnadottir. The C. V.
Mosby Company. 1990. (Superb for "exploit assesement
and Manipulation)
The Prefrontal
Cortex. Anatomy, Physiology and Neuropsychology of the
Frontal Lobe. Joaquin M. Fuster. Third Edition.
Lippincott - Raven, 1997.
References on
Neuronal Damage, Epileptogenesis, Degeneration and Death.
These are
multiple, I'll give you the most general and encompassing
hardcover ones, from which you can look for further data
if interested.
Cortical
Plasticity : LTP and LTD. Fazeli and Collingridge. Bios,1996.
Cell Death and
Diseases of Nervous System. Vassilis R. Koliatsos and
Rajiv R. Ratan. Humana Press, 1999.
Mitochondria &
Free Radicals in Neurodegenerative Diseases. M. Flint
Beal et al; Wiley - Liss, 1997.
Highly Selective
Neurotoxins. Basic and Clinical Applications. Edited by
Richard M. Kostrzewa. Humana Press. 1998.
Selective
Neurotoxicity. H. Herken, F. Hucho, Springer - Verlag,
1994.
When Cells Die. A
comprehensive evaluation of Apoptosis and Programmed Cell
Death. Richard A. Lockshin et al. , 1998.
That should be
more than enough.
References on Borna Virus.
a) CTMI 190 -
Current Topics in Microbiology and Immunology. H.
Koprovski and W. I. Lipkin. Borna Disease. Springer, 1995
Includes: Molecular Biology of Borna Virus, Natural and
Experimental Borna Disease in Animals, Borna Disease -
Neuropathology and Pathogenesis, Immunopathogenesis of
Borna, Behavioural Disturbances and Pharmacology of Borna
Disease, Human Infections with Borna and Potential
Pathogenic Implications. If you are interested in the
virus you must have this one !
b) Ter Meulen V. ,
Katz M. , Slow virus infections of the central nervous
system. Springer, 1977.
c) Danner K. ,
Mayr A. In vitro studies on borna virus. Properties of
the virus. Arch. Virol. 61, 261 - 271.
d) Dittrich W,
Bode L, Ludwig H, et al. Learning deficiencies in Borna
disease virus - infected but clinically healthy rats.
1989. Biol. Psychiatry 26: 818 828 (a very enlightening
study !)
e) Morales et al.
Axonal transport of Borna disease virus along olfactory
pathways in spontaneously and experimentally infected
rats. Med. Microbiol. Immunol. 177: 51 - 68.
f) Rott R et al.
Borna Disease, a possible hazard for man ? Arch. Virol.
118: 143 - 149, 1991.
g) Caplazi P. et
al. Borna disease in naturally infected cattle. J. Comp.
Path 111: 65 - 72, 1994.
h) Lundgren A. L.
Natural Borna disease in domestic animals others than
horses and sheep. J. Vet. Med. B40: 298 - 303.
i) Grigson C.
Shiqmim: pastoralism and other aspects of animal
management in the Chalcolithic of the Nothern Negev,
Israel. British Archeological Trust, Oxford, BAR
international series, 356, Chap. 7, page 219, 1987.
j) Paz U. The
birds of Israel: order struthioniformes (ostriches).
Greene, Lexington, 1987.
k) Daubney R.
Mahlau E. A. Viral encephalomyelitis of equines and
domestic ruminants in the Near East. Res. Vet. Sci. 8:
375.
l)Malkinson M. et
al. Borna disease in sheep: first case recorded in Israel.
Isr. J. Vet. Med N 49.
m) Gozstonyi et al.
Rabies and Borna disease - a comparative pathogenic study
of two neurovirulent agents. Lab. Investigations. 1993.
68: 285 - 295.
n) Lipkin et al.
Neurotransmitter abnormatilies in Borna Disease. Brain
Research, 475 : 366 - 370.
o) Kao M. et al.
Adaptation of Borna disease virus to the mouse. J. Gen.
Virol. 1984. 65: 1845 - 1849.
p) Narayan O. et
al. Behavioural disease in rats caused by
immunopathological responses to persistent Borna virus in
the brain. Science, 1983, 220: 1401 - 1403.
q) Solbrig M. V.
et al. Borna disease virus causes dopamine disturbances
in rats. Society for Neuroscience, 1992. 1: 665 (abstract)
r) Sprankel H. et
al. Behavioural alterations in tree shrewds induced by
Borna disease virus. Med. Microbiology and Immunology,
1978, 165 : 1-18.
s) Bechter et al.
Possible significance of Borna disease for humans. Neurol.
Psychiatr. Brain Research, 1992, 1:23 - 29.
t) Bode et. al.
Borna disease virus infection and affective disorders in
man. Arch. Virol. Suppl 7, 1993, 159 - 167.
u) Bode et. al.
Borna disease virus genome transcribed and expressed in
psychiatric patients. Nature Medicine, 1995, 1(3):232-236.
v) Stitz L, Krey H.
F, Ludwig H. Borna disease in rhesus monkeys as a model
for uveo - cerebral symptoms. J. Med. Virol. 6: 333 - 340.
w) Vande Woude S.
et al. A Borna virus cDNA encoding a protein recognized
by antibodies in humans with behavioral diseases.
Science, 1990, 250:1278 - 1281.
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