Summary:
The author, clinical psychologist and philosopher, deals with three questions which are most
pressing at old age for giving the framework of suffering and disease as well as being a common
part of existential feelings in health old people. The examples illustrating these opinions include
biography and opinions of the philosopher Nietzsche (1844 - 1900), who suffered from syphilis and
psychosis and expressed these opinions in a genial way in his poetic-philosophic work „So Said
Zarathustra“. Nietzsche, as well as other two subjects of the assay, Imanuel Kant (1724 - 1804) and F.
M. Dostojevsky (1821 - 1881) looked for answers to questions which they had to accept in spite of their
refusal (also T. G. Masaryk felt lonely at this high age). The author question the Kant‘s categorical
imperative as an effort of people to adapt to the average. The specifi cally documented circumstances
include progressing dementia in Kant, shown in his correspondence, solitude and suffering of
Dostojevsky, who was affected by epilepsy of GM type and projected his conditions to heroes of his
novels. The authors warns against a false sympathy, which the patients usually disclose and, after 30
years of practice, raises a question whether professionals are adequately prepared to answer these
questions. The pity may be intrusive and extortionary and the author is of the opinion that the slogan
of the International Year of Seniors 1999: the World Belongs to All Generations should be exercised
in practice.
Key words:
seniority, pain, suffering, solitude, Kant I., Dostojevsky F. M., Nietzsche F.
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