Bővebb ismertető
Introduction
U. Vianna Filho
In his historical evolution, man has been able to dominate nature by means
of his technological achievements, his knowledge and his inventiveness,
attaining an increasing control over the world and its organization. As a
result, his power over his fellow men has also increased, giving him more
and more responsibility which leads, of necessity, to one existential
problem: is the contemporary man, with all his power and knowledge,
really happy ?
Technological progress has brought him several rights and desires:
health, better insight into the future and greater control over his own des-
tiny, but despite all this he still suffers from insecurity and from all the new
problems that he has to face, which fact accounts for his imperfections and
limitations that inevitably generate anxiety.
Anxiety, therefore, constitutes one of the main characteristics of modern
man. It can be foreseen today that, in the near future, the entire population
of any large city will suffer from anxiety and behave in a 'neurotic' way.
Man is seeking relief from pain, suffering and, naturally, also anxiety.
Thus all possible efforts are being made to find a solution for this anxiety.
The search for substances that are able to eliminate anxiety is one of the
constant concerns of modern science, and, in this context, one of the turn-
ing points, as we will see in this volume, has been the discovery of the chemi-
cal agents known as the benzodiazepines.
Their use has become so widespread that they are probably the most
largely prescribed drugs in the world, their importance for the relief of
anxiety being possibly equivalent to that of aspirin for physical pain.