Definition of

Lucidity

Intelligence

Lucidity can be associated with intellectual capacity.

Lucidity is the quality of lucidity . This adjective , for its part, refers to someone who is clear in their expressions, in their reasoning or in their style .

For example: “This writer is one of the most lucid thinkers on the entire American continent,” “The mayor once again showed his lucidity by asking his followers not to respond to attacks,” “Grandfather lost some lucidity, but his physique remains impeccable."

What is lucidity

Lucidity is usually associated with a person's intellectual, analytical or reflective capacity . Those who are considered lucid usually generate admiration for their thoughts on a certain situation or for their ability to see problems in a different way than others.

Another way to understand lucidity is as mental speed . In a moment of tension or uncertainty, the lucid person is the one who has greater reflexes and the ability to react. If there is a short circuit in a house, a sign of lucidity is to cut off the electricity.

Lucidity, on the other hand, is coherence or awareness . A medical report may report that a person is hospitalized in intensive care but lucid, which means that said individual is located in time and space. On the other hand, if the person is unconscious, it will be said that they do not show traces of lucidity.

Hospital

Lucidity is linked to consciousness.

Decreased consciousness

Starting from this meaning, we would have to highlight that there is what is called decreased mental clarity , which can be defined as the state in which a person sees their consciousness reduced . This would be the case, for example, of coma.

There are many causes that can cause an individual to suffer this aforementioned decrease. However, among the most important are the following:

  • Accidents such as heat stroke or hypothermia.
  • Brain disorders such as Alzheimer's disease, seizures due to different origins or seizures.
  • Excessive consumption of alcoholic beverages or other drugs.
  • Problems in the cardiac or respiratory system, such as arrhythmia, hypotension, hypertension or hypoxia.
  • Pathologies such as hyperglycemia or liver failure.

Lucidity in literature

In addition to all of the above, we would have to emphasize that within the literature there are various works that use the term that we are now analyzing in their title. This would be the case, for example, of “An attack of lucidity” . Jill Taylor is the author of this autobiographical and moving narrative in which she tells how years ago she suffered a massive stroke that led her to gradually lose her various mental abilities.

That situation he reached and his eight years of hard recovery, undergoing doctors and rehabilitation tasks, are what become the central axes of the work that allows not only to know the human body in depth but also a case of improvement in capital letters.

“Essay on Lucidity” , finally, is a novel written by the Portuguese José Saramago and published in 2004 . This book reflects on the possible consequences of a peaceful revolution that occurs within the framework of a democratic regime.