Rainman4707
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- Dec 30, 2012
- Messages
- 1,615
- Reaction score
- 535
Summary.
1. Strictly speaking, disease or illness can affect only the body; hence, there can be no mental illness.
2. "Mental illness" is a metaphor. Minds can be "sick" only in the sense that jokes are "sick or economies are "sick".
3. Psychiatric diagnoses are stigmatizing labels, phrased to resemble medical diagnoses and applied to persons whose behaviour offends or annoys others.
4. Those who suffer from and complain of their own behaviour are usually classified as "neurotic" those whose behaviour makes other suffer, and about whom others complain, are usually classified as psychotic.
5. Mental illness is not something a person has, but is something he does or is.
6. If there is no Mental illness there can be no Mental hospitalisation, treatment, or cure for it. Of course, people may change their behaviour or personality, with or without Psychiatric intervention. Such intervention is nowadays called "treatment" and the change, if it proceeds in a direction approved by society, "recovery" or "cure"
7. The introduction of Psychiatric consideration into the administration of the criminal law-for example, the insanity plea, and verdict, diagnoses of mental incompetence to stand trial and so forth-corrupt the law and victimise the subject on whose behalf they are ostensibly employed.
8. Personal conduct is always rule following, strategic and meaningful. Patterns of interpersonal and social relations may be regarded and analysed as if they were games, the behaviour of the players being governed by explicit or tacit game rules.
9. In most types of voluntary psychotherapy, the therapist conducts himself; and to help the client scrutinise the goals and values of the life games he plays.
10. There is no medical, moral, or legal justification for involuntary Psychiatric interventions. They are crimes against humanity.
1. Strictly speaking, disease or illness can affect only the body; hence, there can be no mental illness.
2. "Mental illness" is a metaphor. Minds can be "sick" only in the sense that jokes are "sick or economies are "sick".
3. Psychiatric diagnoses are stigmatizing labels, phrased to resemble medical diagnoses and applied to persons whose behaviour offends or annoys others.
4. Those who suffer from and complain of their own behaviour are usually classified as "neurotic" those whose behaviour makes other suffer, and about whom others complain, are usually classified as psychotic.
5. Mental illness is not something a person has, but is something he does or is.
6. If there is no Mental illness there can be no Mental hospitalisation, treatment, or cure for it. Of course, people may change their behaviour or personality, with or without Psychiatric intervention. Such intervention is nowadays called "treatment" and the change, if it proceeds in a direction approved by society, "recovery" or "cure"
7. The introduction of Psychiatric consideration into the administration of the criminal law-for example, the insanity plea, and verdict, diagnoses of mental incompetence to stand trial and so forth-corrupt the law and victimise the subject on whose behalf they are ostensibly employed.
8. Personal conduct is always rule following, strategic and meaningful. Patterns of interpersonal and social relations may be regarded and analysed as if they were games, the behaviour of the players being governed by explicit or tacit game rules.
9. In most types of voluntary psychotherapy, the therapist conducts himself; and to help the client scrutinise the goals and values of the life games he plays.
10. There is no medical, moral, or legal justification for involuntary Psychiatric interventions. They are crimes against humanity.