In Shakespeare 's play' Hamlet ', madness is defined as a disease that transforms thinking into pure madness. This 'sickness' deprives rationality and consciousness of thinking, and creates a completely disordered person. "The general concept of crazy is that the people working under it are very violent or very suicidal or meaningless" (Kellogg). Kellogg explains the behavior of people suffering from insanity; he provides a clear knowledge of actions related to being introduced to crazy individuals.
William ยท Shakespeare's classic tragedy "Hamlet" is filled with problems that are frequently reproduced through many eternal themes, problems and processes. In this play, the hero 's Hamlet pretends to be insane to obscure his inner guilt and revenge. His actions are persuasive (and in fact are not in the danger of "actions"), the reader says, "Hey! Hamlet just pretends or is really crazy Shakespeare leaves Hamlet's spiritual state to interpret, and opens the way for some attractive 'table' discussion. When thinking inside and outside this concept, you have to be open to an abstract idea. please think about it. Hamlet 's crazy behavior made him mad. A person passes through another person and does not let it pass through one person or another person
Hamlet and Crazy William Shakespeare created Hamlet 's character in this tragedy. And it completely impressed the madness of the hero pretend. This article deals with this aspect of the drama. George Lehman Kitrech explains that Hamlet is pretending not to be honest, but to fail in Hamlet Tragedy of Prince Hungary. Protection of madness is ineffective, and reform is necessary for obsolete ones. I am going to do this by considering some criticism about the crazy defense caused by the rules of M'Naghten. The concept of insanity as defense was established in the early 18th century Arnold Incident (1724) and further developed in the Hadfield case (1800 years) in the second half of the 18th century, but a standard test of criminal responsibility It was only.
There are four different hypotheses for this problem: (1) Hamlet is totally sensible but pretends to be crazy; (2) Hamlet is more or less crazy after an interview with a ghost But the court game Only after it has fully developed, (4) Hamlet never pretends to be crazy. As can be seen from the given overview, the first hypothesis is assumed. But before mentioning the reasons for supporting this hypothesis it is convenient to consider the opinions of people who think that Hamlet is more or less crazy when a ghost appears. At the moment, experts, "crazy doctors" are sometimes called "mad physicians", but they are within tolerance.