
Paranoia
Author: Daniel Freeman
Narrator: Robin Laing
Unabridged: 9 hr 35 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: William Collins
Published: 02/01/2024

Author: Daniel Freeman
Narrator: Robin Laing
Unabridged: 9 hr 35 min
Format: Digital Audiobook Download
Publisher: William Collins
Published: 02/01/2024
Daniel Freeman, one of the UK's leading clinical psychologists, is professor of clinical psychology, Oxford University.
What a potboiler! Goodreads always asks 'what did you learn from this book? and I have to say, in this case, 'very little'. Worse, the book is a symptom of the very disease that it is allegedly trying to cure - promoting what might be called an hysteria of normalisation within an ideology of 'expert'......more
This book was not at all what I expected. I thought this would be an honest portrayal of why we are so paranoid. The books starts off explaining that paranoia is indeed common place, that everyone has paranoid feelings at some point in their life - that it only gets harmful when we become obsessed by......more
Concise examination around the burgeoning phenomena of ‘paranoia’, the modern world is becoming entrenched in. Well written, and referencing across politics, economics and the media when looking for causes, whilst finishing off with strategies to reduce such thought processes.......more
Paranoid thoughts are more common than most people believe… or at least happen more often than they are treated. I know that as a child, I was pretty sure that my belief that someone in my family might decide to kill me was untrue, but I made sure to never eat food that no one else was eating, just......more
Highlights for the first time the astonishing prevalence of paranoia in society today. Explores what paranoia is, what causes it, the thoughts and feelings associated with it, and how we can deal with them Takes a scientific perspective on paranoia in society: asking whether we are more paranoid now......more
' reads rather like early Oliver Sacks… Freeman does a lot of citing of his own case studies and surveys, which are fascinating; offers a little bit of the history of the treatment of certain kinds of mental illness, which is shocking; and reveals how and why the Covid-19 pandemic has proved to be absolutely devastating to our sense of trust, which is highly disturbing' Spectator 'Anyone who’s been a hack as long as me (sixty-five years and counting) reckons we can spot paranoia when we see it. But we need Daniel Freeman to tell us how to recognise the real thing. He doesn’t only write from experience. He knows how to deal with it. A truly important book’ JOHN HUMPHRYS ‘Daniel Freeman’s remarkable new book offers a front row seat for his groundbreaking research and recounts a compelling, and endearingly personal, account of supporting those affected by the experience of extreme mistrust. It is a superb achievement: intimate yet expansive, and a true testament to the transformational power of empathy and understanding in the face of fear’ DR ELEANOR LONGDEN, UNIVERSITY OF MANCHESTER ‘An eye-opening exploration of mistrust from the leading psychologist of paranoia. Daniel Freeman provides a compelling account of paranoia, conspiracy thinking and the crisis of trust now corroding our societies. His superb new book is authoritative and illuminating’ PROFESSOR KIA NOBRE FBA, YALE UNIVERSITY ‘This book busts many assumptions about the nature of psychiatric disease and psychological distress, and their relationship to all of us. A fascinating journey through the scientific method to understand new ways of conceptualising our mental health, and techniques to improve it’ PROFESSOR GUY LESCHZINER, GUY’S AND ST THOMAS’ HOSPITALS