I think I may have confused "solitude" with "isolation." JB, you're probably right, or not wrong, by looking at isolation as inherently forced (whether self-imposed or otherwise.) Isolation, as I intuitively understood it, just meant to me being
physically remote from sentient beings of similar kind for prolonged periods of time, whether forced or not is a variable. Additionally, "prolonged period of time" is a variable too. Damn words.
I still think that it is only
forced movement from society into solitary confinement that has devastating effects on the brain, never mind myelin. There was a documentary on youtube of a man who lived in Patagonia alone for 40 years, isolated physically, but seemingly not in a depressed-state. Although, who knows what's the benchmark for a "depressed state." It seems though as if he would not be diagnosed by modern medicine anyway.
Or, maybe, he would just in virtue of living alone for 40 years. Ha! #modern medicine.
Edit: If
this guy has less Myelin, then I'm sold.
Edited by alecnevsky, 28 November 2012 - 08:40 PM.