Technology0 min ago
Phobias
13 Answers
Does a phobia have to exist for there to be one? I found a website with a list of Phobias on it, and some of them are beyond bizarre!
Allodoxaphobia- Fear of opinions?
Arachibutyrophobia- Fear of peanut butter sticking to the roof of the mouth?
Linonophobia- Fear of string?
Are these real, or can anyone just make them up?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Seen 2 tv progs about 2 separate cases of a fear of buttons. I know personally of a someone who has an ominous looming fear of coathangers.
It's not always e.g. string = stark terror, like with heights etc. but can escalate to stark terror through irrational thoughts and associations. [in my amateur opinion] :-)
It's not always e.g. string = stark terror, like with heights etc. but can escalate to stark terror through irrational thoughts and associations. [in my amateur opinion] :-)
The thing with phobias is that they are totally irrational, so I could quite believe that a small number of people are scared of these things. I'm absolutely petrified of butterflies, moths and the things they grow from (which I can't even bear to type), and I'm not the only one. People will often say "they won't hurt you" but that doesn't make any difference. If you think of one of the more common phobia of spiders there is no logical reason to be scared of them (in Britain at least), yet they terrify people.
Gazza, I can't confirm the diagnosis, but the word for 'cupboard' is 'ermario' in Greek - the source-language for virtually all phobia-names. So, poor Mr di Canio would appear to be suffering from 'ermariophobia'.
In answer to the original question, all it needs is for some afflicted soul to tell his psychiatrist that he has a mortal dread of eyelids, for example, for the word 'blepharophobia' to appear as if by magic in the medical lexicon.
'Hellenophobia', Darth. Perhaps we should also remember Virgil's 'Aeneid' and the words of the Trojan priest on seeing the famous Trojan horse - actually a Greek 'horse' left at the gates of Troy - "Timeo Danaos et dona ferentes" - usually translated as "I fear the Greeks even when bearing gifts." So hellenophobia has been about for a long time and we might also call it 'danaophobia'. Cheers
My guess is that the brain is very very complex, and perhaps occaisonally nerve connector things get connected up wrongly - such as with sadomasochism or with smokers becoming deluded that nicotine cures anxiety (although the latter is an effect of taking the drug). Therefore maybe sometimes the sight of - say.... the 'windows' key on a pc keyboard might send a confused signal in the brain that produces a dark, primordial fear, that stabs into the very heart of my humanity, and yet, I my eyes are still drawn to it...