10 Wilmington Place (Southern Ohio Madhouse) Lunatic Asylum in the southern state of Ohio is a sanatorium with criminal crazy, stupidity, dementia dissolving pot in the province, later named Dayton State Hospital in the future and eventually 10 It was named Wilmington. The place is the concept of "completely destroying" previously designated buildings and it has become a nursing home for the elderly. Remember that the popular ideas at the moment did not completely eliminate that old relationship with "evil," "spiritual evil," and similar mythological phenomena from "crazy".
By the 1870 's, in North America, officials who operated Lunatic Asylums renamed them Insane Asylums. The term "asylum" in the last century has lost its original meaning as a place of exile, withdrawal or security, and has been associated with widespread abuse of the media, including friends of former outpatient organization "Alleged Lunatics." Former patient such as society and Elizabeth Packard. However, the relative proportion of the public diagnosed as a mental disorder is increasing. This includes the possibility of humanitarian problems, occupational status / incentives for money, existence of evacuation centers, tolerance of the community due to abnormal behavior to the community (giving the greatest impact to the poor), industrialization of families, etc. , Related to various factors. Pressured
10 Wilmington Place (Southern Ohio Madhouse) Lunatic Asylum in the southern state of Ohio is a sanatorium with criminal crazy, stupidity, dementia dissolving pot in the province, later named Dayton State Hospital in the future and eventually 10 It was named Wilmington. The place is the concept of "completely destroying" previously designated buildings and it has become a nursing home for the elderly. - Optimistic exile "Philosophy is composed mainly of philosophers who think all other people are stupid.He often prove this, I proved that he is usually himself "Mencken put together most of Voltaire's Candide in this humorous statement. He detailed Voltaire's view on contemporary philosophy, especially philosopher Leibniz's optimism.