Lotus
What does "a method to madness" mean? Does it mean that there is always a mthod for everything? That we should always make a plan and settle a method before doing anything? Thanks a lot!
Sep 8, 2016 8:37 AM
Answers · 11
4
It's a quote from "Hamlet" by Shakespeare: "Though this be madness, yet there is method in 't" (Polonius) Polonius sees that Hamlet's behaviour seems erratic and insane, but there is clearly a plan behind it. We've changed this quote to "a method to your madness" to mean that there is a plan somewhere, even if it's not obvious.
September 8, 2016
1
To add to Peachey's answer, it's become a stock phrase. Many people use it without being conscious of it as a quotation from Shakespeare. Show a native English speaker "there's a method in my __________" and most will say "madness" instantly, without even thinking. The most common use is a lighthearted way of saying "this looks crazy, but there's actually a reason for it." "Here's my way of converting Fahrenheit to Celsius. I start by adding 40. Yes, 40, not 32. I know it seems crazy, but there's a method to my madness..." However, the phrase is so common that people like to use it as a joking way of talking about _anything_ concerning either methods or madness.
September 8, 2016
Just to add (in case it wasn't clear) Your psychology professor was making a joke. As the answers below said, the phrase "there's a method to [my] madness" usually means that while your actions may seem kind of crazy, you really do have a plan that makes sense. But when he used it, he was making a play on words. Psychology is somewhat associated with "madness." So, a method for psychological experimentation is a "method to madness." Ha ha. It isn't a very good joke.
September 8, 2016
Usually it means that even though somebody is doing something that seems crazy, maybe they actually have a plan and a reason for what they are doing.
September 8, 2016
Maybe a dialect difference here, but I have frequently heard and used 'method in my madness', meaning exactly the same thing as 'method to madness'
September 8, 2016
Show more
Still haven’t found your answers?
Write down your questions and let the native speakers help you!