O.G. Rose | 16. Why Do Madness and Genius Like to Tango? by O.G. Rose @O.G.Rose.Michelle.and.Daniel | Uploaded February 2024 | Updated October 2024, 21 hours ago.
Pick up a copy of "Belonging Again" by O.G. Rose today!
amazon.com/Belonging-Again-Explanation-Part-I-ebook/dp/B0C4M1F9WX?ref_=ast_author_dp
It’s a cliché now, associating genius and madness: the market is saturated with movies and shows about it (The Queen’s Gambit, PI, Whiplash — I could go on). Why does this stereotype resonate? Well, because Nikola Tesla seems to have loved a pigeon and John Nash developed schizophrenia — the stereotype is backed by evidence. But isn’t that strange? If genius is the ability to reason, and madness the inability to reason, shouldn’t they share an inverse relationship versus correlate?
For the rest of the piece, please see:
ogrose.substack.com/p/why-do-madness-and-genius-like-to-tango-7528f631db87
Medium:
o-g-rose-writing.medium.com/why-do-madness-and-genius-like-to-tango-7528f631db87
Pick up a copy of "Belonging Again" by O.G. Rose today!
amazon.com/Belonging-Again-Explanation-Part-I-ebook/dp/B0C4M1F9WX?ref_=ast_author_dp
It’s a cliché now, associating genius and madness: the market is saturated with movies and shows about it (The Queen’s Gambit, PI, Whiplash — I could go on). Why does this stereotype resonate? Well, because Nikola Tesla seems to have loved a pigeon and John Nash developed schizophrenia — the stereotype is backed by evidence. But isn’t that strange? If genius is the ability to reason, and madness the inability to reason, shouldn’t they share an inverse relationship versus correlate?
For the rest of the piece, please see:
ogrose.substack.com/p/why-do-madness-and-genius-like-to-tango-7528f631db87
Medium:
o-g-rose-writing.medium.com/why-do-madness-and-genius-like-to-tango-7528f631db87