Checkmite
Skepticifimisticalationist
Err... Seriously, WTH do you even think "delusion" means?
In DSM-III and IV, delusions were defined as “false beliefs due to incorrect inference about external reality”. The DSM-5 definition is: “fixed beliefs that are not amenable to change in light of conflicting evidence”.
The notion that yeah, he believed that his wife and kids were some kind of shape-shifting alien lizard, and was convinced enough to act on it, but you "don't think he was delusional at all" is just nonsense.
Yeah, surprise, that kind of firmly believing crazy BS is exactly what a delusion is. By definition.
And generally, by now I'm curious WTH do you think schizophrenia is, how it manifests, or how it's diagnosed. It's not COVID where you can stick a swab up someone's nose, and see if some solution changes colour. It literally just means in having delusions, and/or hallucinations (in the case of paranoid schizophrenia), and/or bizarre thought patterns, and/or disorganized speech, and/or a lack of motivation. (Source, for example, https://www.psychiatry.org/patients-families/schizophrenia/what-is-schizophrenia )
I do know what schizophrenia is.
If you have fixed crazy ideas and they can't find another source for it (such as hallucinating because you take drugs, or have trouble speaking because of some neural damage) and it crosses the threshold of causing sufficient anguish or impairment or danger to yourself or others, congrats, you qualify. It's in fact pretty much the bucket diagnostic for when you DON'T have some more accurate idea why the hell does that guy have crazy thoughts.
That's all it means.
Yeah, except....we do know exactly why that guy believed the crazy things he did.
When police asked why he did what he did, he invoked theories about QAnon and The Illuminati. QAnon and the Illuminati are conspiracy theories that exist externally and independently of him - in the case of the latter especially, it's a body of theory that has existed since before he was even born. Belief in these things didn't arise spontaneously in his head as a result of disordered thinking by a brain with a chemical problem, it arose because he read what other people had wrote about those things either online or in books, or wherever, and was convinced by their arguments that those things were true.
And no, that's not "exactly what a delusion is". Believing something that you've been talking into believing isn't "having a delusion" just because the belief is objectively wrong. It's just being wrong.
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