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Heliophobia

The English suffixes -phobia, -phobic, -phobe (of Greek origin) occur in technical usage in psychiatry to construct words that describe irrational, disabling fear as a mental disorder (e.g., agoraphobia) and in biology to descibe organisms that dislike certain conditions (e.g., acidophobia). In common usage they also form words that describe dislike or hatred of a particular thing or subject. more...

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Many people apply the suffix "-phobia" inappropriately to mild or irrational fears with no serious substance; however, earlier senses relate to psychiatry which studies serious phobias which disable a person's life. For more information on the psychiatric side of this, including how psychiatry groups phobias as "agoraphobia", "social phobia", or "simple phobia", see phobia. Treatment for phobias may include desensitization (graduated exposure therapy) or flooding.

The following lists include words ending in -phobia, and include fears that have acquired names. In many cases people have coined these words as neologisms, and only a few of them occur in the medical literature. In many cases, the naming of phobias has become a word game.

Note too that no things, substances, or even concepts exist which someone, somewhere may not fear, sometimes irrationally so. A list of all possible phobias would run into many thousands and it would require a whole book to include them all, certainly more than an encyclopedia would be able to contain. So this article just gives an idea of the kind of phobias which one may encounter, certainly not all.

Most of these terms tack the suffix -phobia onto a Greek word for the object of the fear (some use a combination of a Latin root with the Greek suffix, which many classicists consider linguistically impure).

In some cases (particularly the less medically-oriented usages), a word ending in -phobia may have an antonym ending in -philia - thus: coprophobia / coprophilia, Germanophobia / Germanophilia.

See also the category:Phobias.

Phobia lists

A large number of "-phobia" lists circulate on the Internet, with words collected from indiscriminate sources, often copying each other.

Some regard any attempt to create a list of phobias as an irrational endeavor because, theoretically, a person could become conditioned to have a fear of anything. Also, a significant number of unscrupulous psychiatric websites exist that at the first glance cover a huge number of phobias, but in fact use a standard text (see an example below) to fit any phobia and reuse it for all unusual phobias by merely changing the name. For a couple of striking examples.

"... Poor performance or grades. Promotions that pass you by. moths phobia will likely cost you tens, even hundreds of thousands of dollars over the course of your lifetime, let alone the cost to your health and quality of life. Now Moths Phobia can be gone for less than the price of a round-trip airline ticket."
"... The expert phobia team at CTRN's Phobia Clinic is board-certified to help with Russophobia and a variety of related problems. The success rate of our 24 hour program is close to 100%"

Read more at Wikipedia.org


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Burning ring of fire - annular eclipse in May - Night Watchman - Column
From Discover, 5/1/94 by Bob Berman

THE MOON GLIDES DIRECTLY IN FRONT OF THE sun this month. A total eclipse? Strangely, no. An odd annular eclipse will unfold, sweeping across the United States in the premier celestial event of the year. * That the moon and sun normally appear to be the same size is a happy accident. The sun is 400 times larger than the moon, but it happens to He 400 times farther away. The result is a near perfect match, allowing the two to align occasionally for the stunning phenomenon of darkness at noon. But because the moon's elliptical orbit carries it 28 to 32 Earth diameters from us, the moon now and then fails to block the sun totally even when the alignment is right. That's what will happen on May 10. Because the moon will be near its far orbital point when it eclipses the sun, it won't appear quite large enough to fully cover the solar disk Instead, a thin ring---or annulus of sunlight will surround it.

Does the sun transformed into a brilliant ring sound intriguing? You're in luck if you live in a 130-mile-wide path that angles across the United States from E1 Paso to Detroit to Buffalo to the entire coastline of Maine. If you live anywhere else, the consolation prize is a fine partial eclipse; the sun

will be reduced to an eerie crescent, the stuff of dreams.

You'll need eye protection either way. True, eclipses are not as dangerous as Commonly thought. The dire warnings of immediate eye damage from squinting at the sun, repeated before every eclipse, have given the public a good case of heliophobia. Perhaps this misinformation is good. Some people may go overboard if they're told it's okay to take a quick sunward glance. In any case, never look through a telescope at the sun; the focused light could blind you in a second.

To be really safe, you can create a pinhole camera by poking a hole in a piece of paper with a needle, then projecting the sun's image through it and onto a second sheet held underneath. But it's far more striking to observe the sun-moon minuet more directly, through a filter. Shade number 14 welders' goggles, from any welding supply store, are safe and inexpensive. Just the rectangular glass replacement filter is enough; you don't need the whole goggles unless you'll be repairing your car at the same time.

Then just sit back---the sun will be high up, especially from the country's eastern half. Look for sunspots. We're now near the minimum point of the 11year solar cycle, so the sun is nearly free Of blemishes. But occasional storms materialize anyway and if any black dots appear to your unaided (but, filter-protected) eye, they're larger than our planet ! By an interesting coincidence, the moon's 2,200-mileper-hour orbital speed propels it through a distance equal to its own diameter every hour. At night it creeps against the background stars at this speed, and on May 10 it covers the sun at about the same rate. It's a two-hour event: the moon needs an hour to obscure the sun and another to get out of the way.

Look beneath trees around mid-eclipse, shortly after 1 P.M. eastern, 10 AM. Pacific time. Each of the innumerable spaces between the leaves acts as its own pinhole camera, creating a bizarre profusion of bright crescents or rings. The ground will teem with Cheshire cat smiles, just one of the strange ways nature will celebrate that sun and moon and the United States have formed a perfectly straight line in space for the last time until 2012.

COPYRIGHT 1994 Discover
COPYRIGHT 2004 Gale Group

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