The Eighth Day of Creation has a related quote:
In a conversation a few weeks earlier at the faculty club of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a couple of biologists had speculated whether Pauling, whose recent popular book on the benefits to health and sanity of massive doses of vitamin C was stacked in display near the entrance of the M.I.T. bookstore, was showing signs of what one of the men called "old scientist's disease" - which they defined as what happens to great men when they grow beyond the psychological reach of the salutary system by which scientists blow the whistle on one another's mistakes.
The Nobel Prize Winners With Crazy Theories by Qxir
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"Nobel disease" is not a recognized medical term or condition in established medical literature. However, it is often used colloquially to refer to a phenomenon where individuals who have been awarded Nobel Prizes or similar prestigious awards may experience a range of negative psychological effects, including anxiety, depression, or a sense of isolation. This phenomenon could stem from the pressures of living up to societal expectations, the scrutiny that accompanies fame, or a feeling of being an outsider among peers.