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The term insanity is also used in a number of other contexts with a related general meaning. In popular culture, someone may be deemed insane if they have likes and dislikes outside those common for average people, especially if their actions are seen as frantic. While usually taking on negative connotations, this may sometimes include positive connotations, as with some incarnations of the stereotype of a mad scientist (notably those along the lines of Albert Einstein).
Historically, the behaviour of people who would now be regarded as mentally ill has often been interpreted in a religious way. For instance, in the European witchhunts of the Middle Ages, people who behaved in a strange way were suspected of being possessed by the devil. The Malleus Maleficarum manual for witchhunters contained a list of characteristics by which witches could be identified. These characteristics would now be seen by many as symptoms of mental disorders.
Some people disagree with common modern ideas about insanity, thinking that some who are deemed insane by society are truly gifted by God, and misunderstood among the unbelieving masses. A similar position is defended in the book The Indigo Children.
Mental health law Psychiatry Abnormality