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Kolumna


MADNESS – THE HIGHEST FORM OF REASON

Ilija Šaula
detail from: KRK Art dizajn


Madness – The Highest Form of Reason


Ilija Šaula


“Madness” is one of those words that have lost their depth over time. We defend it unconsciously, as if trying to keep it from becoming a shadow of existence rather than a potential for the expansion of life or, to put it more boldly, of character. Today we use it mostly as a warning, a diagnosis, a label for anything that deviates from what we have grown accustomed to calling normal. Yet the word once meant something far greater: a step beyond, an act of courage, an above-average sensitivity, an ability to perceive what most people overlook. Madness was a sign that a person lived on a higher frequency, that their mind was awake enough to exceed the limits of the ordinary.
As normality increases, so does madness. It is one of those paradoxes that seem simple yet carry the entire history of human experience within them. What was unthinkable yesterday is routine today; what was once science fiction is now modern technology; what was once madness is now common sense. Humanity moves by constantly expanding the boundaries of what it considers possible, and every step forward appears as madness at the moment it happens. Madness is, in truth, merely the name for a normality on its way to becoming real.
But there is something deeper still. Madness is not only the shifting of boundaries, nor merely courage or vision. Madness is an excess of life. It is the moment when a person carries more energy than society is prepared to accept, more feeling than the environment can comprehend, and more thought than the time is able to bear. This excess of life is an orgonic charge, a vital force that intensifies through the ages, condensed within the human being, and pushes them beyond what was sufficient only yesterday.
Nature evolves toward complexity, the human being toward consciousness, and society toward a wider field of possibility. And every step in that direction is madness. That is why madness is the highest form of reason: it is reason that has moved one step ahead of its own time. It is a sign that life within a person grows faster than society can follow, and proof that a human being is not confined to the borders of what they are but drawn toward what they may become.
There is, of course, another kind of madness, the clinical, medical one, the kind that requires care, treatment, understanding. It has its own name, its own weight, its own pain. And it is not the subject of this essay, except in the accidental fact that it shares the same word with the other, more elevated form. That shared name is a coincidence of language, not of essence. Clinical madness is a wound; this other one is a wing. One asks for help, the other asks for space. One is a fall, the other an ascent. And it is important not to confuse them, not to let the medical shadow eclipse the philosophical light.
Madness, in its purest form, is a person’s ability to withstand their own excess. To endure the inner surge that pulls them forward. To resist the urge to flee from themselves when they become too alive. And that is why the most beautiful identity we can give madness is this: it is not a flaw in the system, but its highest voltage, an expansion of reason and a promise that life can be made fuller and more meaningful.
And as everything evolves, so did this essay. It, too, had its momentum. It appeared in several versions, grew, widened, matured, searched for its shape, until it finally reached the point where it merged with its own madness. It found its place in this moment, yet its meaning does not belong solely to the present. In some time ahead of us, its words will acquire a new normality and a higher madness. For everything alive continues to grow.
If the reader recognizes something of their own in this text, and feels themselves standing before a challenge, then we have succeeded. In that moment, this essay becomes what it was meant to be: a new experience, a mirror, and an excess of life.




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