...|A BEAUTIFUL MIND | |Film By Ron Howard And Brian Grazer | |Written By Akiva Goldsman | |Biography By Sylia Nasar | | | |Scott H. Smith | |Ron Riggs, M.A., Sociology 101 | |H00166781 | |October 19, 2011 | A Beautiful Mind is the 2001 movie interpretation of Sylvia Nasar biography about John F. Nash Jr. by film makers Ron Howard, Brian Grazer and screenplay written by Akiva Goldsman. The film is about the true life story of John Forbes Nash Jr. of West Virginia. The movie has succeeded in showing that the very brilliantly minded John Nash can...
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...A Beautiful Mind In the movie A Beautiful Mind [JH1] John Nash has difficulty with dating and other types of social interaction. Nash gets anxious easily and stumbles. He has greasy, untamed hair and does not bath often. He sees, hears, and imagine people that do not exist. Despite his apparent condition a beautiful woman falls in love and marries John Nash because she can see him for who he really is. His wife sees his brilliant mind through the odd propensities. As John Nash’s schizophrenia is discovered she is the first to understand and tries to help him out. To me this teaches all of us a great moral lesson that we could all learn from. Nash’s wife loved him for who he is regardless of what he was going through.[JH2] [JH3] John Nash thinks the Russians are after him due to a project he worked on with the American Government. Throughout the movie, Mr. Nash is terrified of people coming to get him. He is a very fearful man and deals with that persistently, but eventually works to overcome it. As John Nash’s Schizophrenia gets worse, a psychiatrist is notified and he takes Mr. Nash away. John takes medicine for schizophrenia for a while. He does not enjoy his medication and finally quits taking it. Mr. Nash fights his troubles with schizophrenia and earns awards for his mathematical accomplishments and his ability to overcome his greatest trouble, schizophrenia. “A Beautiful Mind” is a wonderful movie exploring the strange and twisted workings of...
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...ADYSSA RISKA L. Z. 291 12 089 Business Economics – YP47A A Beautiful Mind – Movie Review A Beautiful Mind is a story based on the life of the famous mathematician John Forbes Nash. His contributions to mathematics are outstanding. When he was an undergraduate, he proved Brouwer's fixed point theorem. He then broke one of Riemann's most perplexing mathematical problems and became famous for the Nash Solution. From then on, Nash provided breakthrough after breakthrough in mathematics. In 1958 John Forbes Nash was described as being 'the most promising young mathematician in the world'. John solved problems in mathematics that many mathematicians deemed not solvable. On the threshold of such a promising and outstanding career, he then went on to suffer through three decades of a devastating form of paranoid schizophrenia. He lost his teaching professions and his job. He refused all medical treatment and spent years in and out of delusional states. Remarkably, in 1994 John won the Nobel Prize in Economic Science for his work on Game Theory. Game Theory is an analytical tool to understand the phenomena behind the way decision-makers interact. Nash's work on Game Theory in the early stages has Nash comparing it to football, pigeon feeding habits and picking up women. It's the bar scene where Nash has his big 'Ah Ha' moment. While Nash and his friends all have their eyes on the same blonde woman, he surprises his colleagues with the question that if we all want the same woman...
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...1. The title of the movie is A Beautiful Mind and the year of the movie is 2001. I viewed the movie multiple times in the past two years due to the fact that I enjoy the movie and watching the character Nash presents. I think I also chose this movie because paranoid schizophrenia is in my family, causing me to somewhat understand the movie better than others. I feel that having the sickness in my family has allowed me to look for the symptoms unlike other families. My uncle is diagnosed with this sickness, and it does affect people differently especially when comparing the actions of Nash and my uncle. The character in A Beautiful Mind, is diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. 2. Schizophrenia, being the mental illness in this movie, was specifically discussed in the movie because Nash was diagnosed with the disease. In the movie, we see...
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...The film A Beautiful Mind follows a brilliant mathematician through his gradual unraveling due to paranoid schizophrenia and later his pursuit to overcome it. The film begins in September of 1947 on John Nash’s first day at Princeton University as a graduate student. Nash who is recognized as a genius among geniuses, never once attends class saying, he instead spends his time at Princeton searching for “a truly original idea”. Nash forms a close friendship with his roommate, Charles Herman, an English student and a competitive friendship with four other math and science graduate students. Mid-way through his final year of school Nash comes up with his “truly original idea” which is considered a breakthrough of great magnitude. Upon...
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...There are many ways to be in prison within the mind. Many people think just because you are free means your mind is too but some think that the people who are physically in prison are the most free mentally. In order to be completely free in your mind you must understand wisdon and the educated aspect of everything. In “Everyday Use” the mother and sister of Dee are not educated but work in the yard and do house work in order to survive. It allows them to have wisdom about things that a college education cant do. Maggie who is Dee’s younger sister and who has always envied her is growing up with the same wisdom as her mother but has not got an education also. They are prisoned within their own minds because they are uneducated and live like they did when you get beat up for looking a white man in the eyes, so when they talk to a white man they look away like they are ashamed of themselves. Dee has always been different she would look anybody in the eyes because she is educated and is very proud of that but she is missing out on the knowledge that her mother and sister both acquired by working in the yard all of the years. Dee is very smart, pretty, and has a more popular mind set about everything in her life. She never wanted to be in the country but she liked the big city and fancy things while her family was completely opposite. Her mother is proud of the fact she has meat on her bones and can kill and prepare her own meals, but Dee thinks that she is to good for that and...
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...Psychology In A Beautiful Mind ________________________________________ The psychology in A Beautiful Mind (the movie) provides a valuable lesson for the practice of self awareness by ordinary people. Artistically differing from the actual events, it is a film, which convincingly uses the visual medium to portray stress and mental illness within one person's mind. The storyline supplants auditory symptoms with visual delusions to narrate the story of the paranoid schizophrenia developed by John Forbes Nash, a Nobel Laureate in Economics. It was an illness, which had been intensified by the anxiety felt by Nash, about the pain suffered by his wife and friends due to his mental condition. Even as he took medication to suppress the symptoms, Nash is shown returning to normal life by becoming self aware. The visually presented psychological symptoms in the movie effectively convey the barriers to distinguishing subconscious patterns within the mind. Click Here To Listen/Download This Page As An MP3 Podcast Psychology In A Beautiful Mind – Competition & Conflict The primary problem for Nash was his inability to distinguish between reality and his delusions. Even normal people fail to distinguish the concrete emotional changes in their viewpoints during the course of an average day. You may be fuming with resentment one moment and joyful, the next. These hidden shifts in moods and attitudes have a clear cause. They happen, because the control of your mind shifts between...
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...The horror of mental illness is something that I personally deal with every day. Although I do not suffer from schizophrenia like John Nash, I do suffer from anxiety. I do not have delusions, but I have intense thoughts, worries, and other emotions over unnecessary things. Anxiety is basically your body’s way of feeling like it is in danger when it really isn’t. Part of my brain perceives the feeling of anxiety while the other part knows that there is no real danger to me, that it is just anxiety, and that is also a living nightmare at times. Throughout the movie, John realized that his delusions are not real; he still perceives them but no longer believes that they are real. Similarly, before I was diagnosed with OCD, I did not understand what the anxiety was making me feel like. Now, I still feel the same anxiety, but I know that what my anxiety makes me think is not true. Many times, I do not know how to react to the people, events or things that cross my path; its part of my anxiety. I never really thought about if the people I see are actually real, or what reality actually is. I’ve never questioned what I perceive as my reality. I feel that no one can define what reality is as a whole. Different people have different realities. We all perceive and believe different things based on our experiences and how things have influenced us. Although we know that people who suffer from schizophrenia have an altered reality that creates hallucinations of things that are not real,...
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...“I have always believed in numbers. And the equations and logics that lead to reason…”(A Beautiful Mind). The movie, A Beautiful Mind captures the life of a mathematical genius' John Nash. In Nash’s early twenties, he studied at a prestigious school called the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The signs of mental illness started to unfold as Nash created his imaginary best friend named Charles. Another character he created is named Parcher, who works for the Central Intelligence Agency and desperately needed his assistance in deciphering Russian messages. “Diagnosed paranoid schizophrenia [at the age of 31], Nash spent the next three decades in and out of mental hospitals” (www.pbs.org). Throughout that time he eventually overcame the struggles of the disorder through his intellectual mind. Schizophrenia is a chronic, more or less debilitating illness characterized by perturbations in cognition, affect and behavior, all of which have a bizarre aspect, according to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders fourth edition. “A more modern definition of schizophrenia describes it as a long-lasting psychotic disorder (involving a severe break with reality). In which there is an inability to distinguish what is real from fantasy as well as disturbances in thinking, emotions, behavior, and perception” (Ciccarelli & White, 2012). In reference to the DSM-IV-TR, the characteristic symptoms of criteria...
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...Two different realities. A beautiful mind, tells the story of John Nash, a graduate student from Princeton University who suffers from schizophrenia. Considered a genius in mathematics, John Nash met his best friend Charles, who also was his roommate as soon as he arrived to Princeton. With his best friend Charles and some other friends that he met a Princeton University he goes out to a bar, where he was not able to establish a relationship with a women. At the same time, he was struggling in writing his thesis, John finally makes it and he then sets off to MIT, where he is working as a teacher. While working as a teacher at MIT, one of his students Alicia approaches him and they arrange themselves to go for a date, they fell in love with each other and eventually they got married. John Nash went back to Princeton University where he met again with his ex roommate Charles, he is very happy to see him again. Back at Princeton is where he meets with Charles niece Marcee which she eventually loves John and even calls him “Uncle John.” John feels the same love for Marcee; he loves her as if she was her own niece. While John Nash is at Princeton he gets invited to the United States Department of Defense Facility where he meets Parcher, and he saw John’s abilities. It was since this day that Parcher gave John an assignment, which consisted in looking for patterns in newspapers and magazines. This assignment was needed for a soviet plot. John was very into this job where he spends...
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...MGMT 171-004 Mathematical Reference Project A Beautiful Mind A Beautiful Mind is a book written by Sylvia Nasar and is A Touchstone Book published by Simon and Schuster. A Beautiful Mind won the 1998 National Book Critics Award for Biography, a contract for a movie deal, and a nomination for The Pulitzer Prize for Biography. This book is based on a man by the name of John Nash who is a brilliant mathematician and also a paranoid schizophrenic. Even though Nash struggled with paranoid schizophrenia he was still able to revolutionize a concept called game theory. This work that he did with game theory greatly improved what was already established as well as created the Nash equilibrium. Game theory is the mathematical study of strategies used to win games. It began with games like tic-tac-toe and chess since they are easy to analyze because they are known as games of complete information. Complete information is when your opponent’s positions are in clear site. Game theory then went on to analyze card games where player’s cards aren’t seen, which is known as incomplete information. In card games there are elements such as bluffing that can become a variable in the analysis. Mathematicians continued to analyze more critical games such as economics, biology, philosophy, and even which girl to go after. This is around the time that John Nash developed a principle for mutual consistency of player’s strategies which is known as the Nash equilibrium. The Nash equilibrium...
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...A Beautiful Mind John Nash- A brilliant mathematician, John’s troubles begin during his time at Princeton. He begins to hallucinate, consistently carrying on conversations and relationships with people who never existed. To make matters worse, he is already anti-social, and has a tendency to isolate and bury himself in work. As time passes, his condition worsens. He begins to believe that there is this elaborate scheme against him; he believes he is being forced to work for the government to decipher codes. That they inserted a coded chip in order to keep track of him, and if he doesn’t comply with their wishes, they will expose him to the Russians, who in turn will kill him. This interferes with his personal and work life tremendously. Although he is able to carry on the basic everyday tasks such as taking care of personal hygiene and eating, he is not able to differentiate the real world from his imaginary world. Eventually, the situation gets to be so extreme that he is placed in a mental institution for a certain period of time, undergoing shock and insulin therapies in order to “treat” his condition. Professor Nash’s case is a very straightforward and meets the criteria for Paranoid Schizophrenia. To be clear Schizophrenia is not the same thing as multiple personality disorder, because Schizophrenics don’t have problems with a split personality but instead a split mind. Hence the Latin derivation “Schitz”Split and “phrenic” meaning mind. Mind in the sense of what is actually...
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...HSP3UI - Movie: A Beautiful Mind 1. Define and explain the term schizophrenia. Schizophrenia is a mental disorder often characterized by abnormal social behaviour and failure to recognize what is real. Common symptoms include false beliefs, unclear or confused thinking, auditory hallucinations, reduced social engagement and emotional expression, and inactivity. A person with schizophrenia often hears voices, experiences delusions and hallucinations and may believe thoughts, feelings and actions are controlled or shared by someone else. 2. When did John first have symptoms or problems? How long has this been going on? John went through most if not all the symptoms of schizophrenia. John’s wife, Alicia, who was pregnant with their child when the first symptoms of his disease become apparent. This had probably been happening for a long time but it was just not as apparent before. 3. Can you find any examples of how there is a stigma attached to mental illness? Stigma is a mark of disgrace that sets a person apart. Stigma brings experiences and feelings of: shame, blame, hopelessness, distress, misrepresentation in the media, reluctance to seek and/or accept necessary help. This could attach to mental illness because stigma can cause mental illnesses if it gets to a certain point. 4. “I don’t much like people and they don’t much like me”. Comment on John Nash’s statement by using examples from the film. John Nash is very socially awkward...
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...In the Movie “A Beautiful Mind” the main character John Nash is a graduate student at Princeton University. He states too many of his fellow classmates that class will dull your mind. He has a roommate named Charles who is considered to be his best friend. He is offered to go to Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he meets Alicia who eventually he marries and has a child with. Nash also meets a man by the name of William Parcher, who claims that he is a part of the Department of Defense. Nash was invited to go to the Pentagon to crack certain codes. Somehow Parcher talks Nash into looking for codes in newspapers and magazines. It is within this time period that Nash becomes extremely paranoid and starts to act irrationally. Now that he is married to Alicia, she was extremely concerned about his before and decided to talk to Nash’s old friend Sol. Sol confirms that Nash has been taking secret envelops and dropping them off at an old mail box. She shows Nash in the hospital all of the letters that he dropped off in the mailbox but were never opened. Then he discovers that hallucinating and he finally understands that he is mentally unstable. This is where he finally understands that Parcher, Charles, and Charles niece are all products of his own imagination. He is diagnosed with schizophrenia and they place him into a mental hospital where he receives instant shock therapy five times a day for ten weeks. When he finally moves back home he is required to take medicine...
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...A Beautiful Mind is a film based on real life of Professor John Nash who received a Nobel Prize in Economics. It is directed by Ron Howard. The story is about the achievements of Professor John Nash and his mental illness. This film reveal the details about the psychological disorder, schizophrenia. In the early ages, John Nash as a college student was living in the isolated world with stress to publish his work. Later, he develops a severe mental illness schizophrenia which get worse day-by-day. His mental illness also effect his family and friends; however he struggles to control his disease. In the beginning of the film, it is shown that John Nash reaches at Princeton University where he meets other honor graduate students. He also meets brilliant professors who are respected and have great achievements. His college life depicts the sixth stage of Erikson’s 8 stages of developmental life, which is Intimacy-vs.-Isolation. His life seems to be isolated. He does not have many friends and he does not share love relationship with anyone. Moreover, he wants to publish his own original idea to get fame. He tries his best to come up with idea and he finds the idea while sitting in the bar. He observes a group of women and develop a theory based idea that is how to approach a lady in the bar. He composed his work and gets his work publish which gives him recognition. Based on his work, he is offered job at MIT where his two classmates join him. Few years later, he is...
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