How do you deal with a madman? For a long time the answer was to beat him and chain him up in the dungeon. But in the more enlightened 18th century, pioneers of psychiatry sought kinder solutions. One of them was what was called โ€œpious fraudโ€.

Pious frauds were, as Victoria Shepherd puts in her fascinating A History of Delusions, โ€œlittle white lies, to trick a person out of a delusionโ€. In revolutionary Paris, Philippe Pinel, head of the Bicรชtre asylum, developed this method. โ€œHe would enter part way in the delusion in the hope of bringing his patient back with him to reality,โ€ she wrote.

For example, to help a patient who was suffering from a terror that he was about to be executed, Pinel staged a mock โ€œtrialโ€ at which the man was found innocent and told he was free to go.

Later, this method had to be adapted to the delusions of grandeur in which patients imagined themselves to be Napoleon

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