Accounts Of The Moon Splitting

Medieval chronicles occasionally recorded unusual astronomical events that puzzled observers of the time. One account describes a night when witnesses claimed the moon appeared to split in two. Such ...

What exactly was it that the monks saw that night in the sky in 1178? Could it have been the impact of an asteroid hitting the Moon’s surface? Or a meteorite entering the earth’s atmosphere just at ...

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Splitting is a symptom of borderline personality disorder where a person is unable to hold opposing thoughts and sees everything as black or white.

Splitting was also described by Hyppolyte Taine in 1878 who described splitting as a splitting of the ego. He described this as the existence of two thoughts, wills, distinct actions simultaneously within an individual who is aware of one mind without the awareness of the other.

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Splitting occurs when a person with borderline personality disorder suddenly characterizes people, objects, beliefs, or situations by extremes, such as either all good or all bad.

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In some instances, what seems like splitting may be an adaptive response to one's environment. Splitting is a natural thought process, like categorizing good and evil.

Splitting is a term used to describe a cognitive distortion where a person views situations and people in extremes—seeing them as either all good or all bad, with no middle ground. This type of “black and white thinking” is common in Borderline Personality Disorder and often leads to abrupt shifts in mood and opinion about others.

Splitting is a relatively common defense mechanism that can lead people to see things in black and white – without nuance. This thought process can potentially damage relationships and harm the individual experiencing it.

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