Dictionary Definition
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Latin sanitas 'health'.Pronunciation
- IPA:/sænəti/, /sænɪti/
Noun
sanity- The condition of being sane.
- Reasonable and rational behaviour.
- ability to get what you want without doing things that will ultimately get you more of what you don’t want
Translations
- Norwegian: tilregnelighet, fornuft
Extensive Definition
Sanity considered as a legal term denotes that an
individual is of sound mind and therefore can bear legal responsibility
for his or her actions. It is generally defined in terms of the
absence of insanity. It
is not a medical term, although the opinions of medical experts are
often important in making a legal decision as to whether someone is
sane or insane. It is also not the same concept as mental
illness. One can be acting under profound mental illness and
yet be sane, and one can also be ruled insane without an underlying
mental illness.
Sanity outside of legal definitions has been
little explored by science and medicine, as the concentration has
been on illness. Dr. P.S. Graven suggested the term "un-sane" to
describe a condition that is not exactly insane, but not quite sane
either.
A theory of sanity was proposed by Alfred
Korzybski in his general
semantics. He believed that sanity was tied to the structural
fit or lack of it between our reactions to the world and what is
actually going on in the world. He expressed this notion in a
map-territory
analogy: "A map is not the territory it represents, but, if
correct, it has a similar structure to the territory, which
accounts for its usefulness." Given that science continually seeks
to adjust its theories structurally to fit the facts, i.e., adjusts
its maps to fit the territory, and thus advances more rapidly than
any other field, he believed that the key to understanding sanity
would be found in the study of the methods of science (and the
study of structure as revealed by science). The adoption of a
scientific outlook and attitude of continual adjustment by the
individual toward his or her assumptions was the way, so he
claimed. In other words, there were "factors of sanity to be found
in the physico-mathematical methods of science."
In his classic book, The Sane Society, published
in 1955, psychologist Erich Fromm
proposed that, not just individuals, but entire societies "may be
lacking in sanity". Fromm argued that one of the most deceptive
features of social life involves consensual validation:
-
- ''It is naively assumed that the fact that the majority of people share certain ideas or feelings proves the validity of these ideas and feelings. Nothing is further from the truth... Just as there is a 'Folie à deux' there is a 'folie à millions.' The fact that millions of people share the same vices does not make these vices virtues, the fact that they share so many errors does not make the errors to be truths, and the fact that millions of people share the same form of mental pathology does not make these people sane.'' (in: Fromm, The Sane Society, Routledge, 1955, pp.14-15)
See also
References
sanity in Czech: Příčetnost
sanity in Polish: Poczytalność
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
IQ,
apprehension,
balance, caliber, capacity, common sense,
comprehension,
conception, cool
head, coolheadedness, coolness, deductive power, due
sense of, esemplastic power, good sense, horse sense, ideation, integrative power,
intellect,
intellectual grasp, intellectual power, intellectualism,
intellectuality,
intelligence,
intelligence quotient, knowledge, level head,
levelheadedness,
lucidity, marbles, mental age, mental
capacity, mental grasp, mental health, mental ratio, mentality, mind, mother wit, native wit,
normality, plain
sense, power of mind, practical mind, practical wisdom, practicality, rationality, reason, reasonableness, reasoning
power, saneness, scope
of mind, sense, senses, sensibleness,
sober-mindedness, soberness, sobriety, sound mind, soundness, stability, thinking power,
understanding,
wit