Known colloquially as “mass hysteria” (which is now considered a non-PC term), it’s one of the most controversial formally named diseases/diagnosis. MPI is basically where multiple people in the same place simultaneously or in rapid succession experience sudden delusions, psychosis, or other mental issues of a similar nature to each other. Notable examples include the dancing sickness in Medieval Germany where people in a town suddenly got a severe urge to jump up and down in the streets, some doing it until they literally died from exhaustion, as well as the laughing sickness of Tanganyika, where a number of children suddenly started laughing uncontrollably.

It’s said to be triggered spontaneously by things like severe collective stress (for example, the stress of living in a medieval town or a country actively pushing for independence from Britan). For some cases, it may also be due in part to exposure to neurotoxic pollutants, like the infamous ergotism that also caused the Salem Witch Trials. It can start with a single person going into psychosis and triggering similar symptoms in people around them who see the strange behaviour.

It also tends to resolve spontaneously after some time, or some cases are resolved by things like exorcism rituals through the placebo effect and the sufferers believing that the “treatment” would help.

I’ve even heard some theories that MPI is responsible for things like miracles supposedly seen performed by religious figures throughout history, or in more modern times, mass sightings of UFOs and paranormal activity.

Do you think this disease is a real thing? Or do all the documented cases have a different underlying cause that we simply haven’t discovered?

  • KiG V2@lemmygrad.ml
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    2 years ago

    I definitely believe things like insanity and fear and peer pressure get scarily strong exponential gravitational pull when crossing a certain event horizon. I see no reason why severe enough cases of this wouldn’t be dissimilar to the point where it’s identifiable as a phenomenon. I’ve seen the capacity for people (myself included) to do incredibly…intense things under the right stressful circumstances.

    I do hesitate to use it to write off UFOs/paranormal/miracles/etc. because I strongly believe in cases of these things being true in ways not explainable by MPI.

    • QueerCommie@lemmygrad.ml
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      2 years ago

      Humans can do crazy things with adrenaline, certain drugs can also cause your body to automatically go into overdrive in the same way. That’s why the Nazis were able to do the seemingly impossible with Blitzkreig. I wouldn’t call it mass hysteria, but I guess it could be linked, like how the people in the German town were able to have the stamina/will to dance for so long

      • KiG V2@lemmygrad.ml
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        2 years ago

        Yes, my-go to example was as a kid hearing a story of a hiker that was getting mushed under a 1-ton rock and he shoved it enough to slide over him and save his life, tearing all the muscles required in the action in a way that normal circumstances would allow you to overexert to such a degree