“…In his academic life, Séamus researched, wrote and cowrote about medical education [2][3][4][5][6] and had a particular interest in technology as a new and exciting element of both teaching and clinical care [7][8][9]. Séamus wrote extensively about philosophy [10,11] and classic texts in the history of psychiatry [12][13][14][15][16][17], and had a particular interest in psychotherapy. Séamus's other contributions and co-authored papers concerned a dizzying array of topics including psychiatric liaison with primary care [18], 'vampirism' as a mental illness [19], translation and interpretation in psychiatry [20,21], synaesthesia [22], 'new' mental illnesses such as solastalgia and hubris syndrome [23,24], various aspects of psychiatric medication [25,26], bibliotherapy [27] and the work of Nicholas Culpeper, a seventeenth-century English physician, herbalist, botanist and astrologer [28].…”