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Normality

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 February 2009

Peter Alexander
Affiliation:
University of Bristol

Extract

I wish to ask what it is for something to be normal, what ‘normal’ means. In one sense we all know, since we freely use conceptions of normality in our everyday talk about things and people. Normality is what the conservative hopes to return to and the progressive hopes to establish. Normal weather is what we usually get at a given season; a normal day is one that is unrelieved by great strokes of either good or ill fortune. In some contexts, to be normal is to be upright; in others to be average or mean. A normal person is one who is not diseased or crooked or mad, can learn and may forget, sleeps well, performs some job of work adequately, is not unbearably sensitive or thick-skinned, and so on. Sometimes a normal person is one who doesn't stand out from the crowd. Often, normal is what I am, and what you are if you are lucky enough to resemble me in certain respects (for any value of ‘I’).

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy 1973

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References

1 I have been greatly helped in the preparation of this lecture by discussions with colleagues in the Departments of Philosophy and Psychiatry at the University of Cincinnati. I am especially grateful to Dr Harvey Mullane (Philosophy) and Dr Paul Ornstein (Psychiatry).

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