Negative emotion and health why do we keep stalking bears, when we only find ...James Coyne
Describes the frustrating search for a link between specific negative emotions and health and why the search often fails. Integrates epidemiology and psychology.
Psychology is the study of human behaviour. It seeks to look at the motivational drives within an individual
and offer an explanation to the behaviour that is demonstrated
Negative emotion and health why do we keep stalking bears, when we only find ...James Coyne
Describes the frustrating search for a link between specific negative emotions and health and why the search often fails. Integrates epidemiology and psychology.
Psychology is the study of human behaviour. It seeks to look at the motivational drives within an individual
and offer an explanation to the behaviour that is demonstrated
Dr. John Parker: The Lentegeur Spring: recovery and hope in a psychiatric ins...SACAP
The purpose of the Lentegeur Spring Foundation is to bring alive this beautiful name, helping
the hospital to evolve into a place that gives birth to hope through re-connection in every
possible way!
Psychiatrist and subject matter expert on the pervasive effects of sexual trauma, Dr. Koock Jung previously held lecturer and researcher positions at Albany Medical College. Dr. Koock Jung also wrote extensively on the links between post-traumatic stress disorder and experiences of sexual abuse.
People who have endured sexual trauma often develop long-lasting behavioral and cognitive patterns that can lead to an experience known as retraumatization. By definition, retraumatization occurs when a person relives their trauma due to environmental or circumstantial triggers that are similar to where the abuse took place. These triggers can often cause survivors to feel violated or vulnerable.
For example, routine procedures during a doctor’s examination or a police investigation can inadvertently retraumatize survivors. In recent years, health care providers, law enforcement officials, and mental health counselors are advised to apply a trauma-informed approach that emphasizes autonomy, trust, and respect when working with people who have experienced sexual assault.
Nobel Prize won for psychedelic meditation breakthroughPyotr Patrushev
Scientists win Nobel Prize for medicine for research into psychedelically catalyzed meditation (PCM) to combat drug and alcohol addiction, improve productivity and general well-being
KAFKAS ÜNİVERSİTESİ/KAFKAS UNIVERSITY
SOCIOLOGY
Course
LECTURE NOTES AND POWER POINT PRESENTATIONS
Prof.Dr. Halit Hami ÖZ
Kars, TURKEY
hamioz@yahoo.com
Definition of a Psychological DisorderIf you felt extremely depresseds.docxrosaliaj1
Definition of a Psychological Disorder
If you felt extremely depressed—so much so that you lost interest in activities, had difficulty eating or sleeping, felt utterly worthless, and contemplated suicide—your feelings would be atypical, would deviate from the norm, and could signify the presence of a psychological disorder. Just because something is atypical, however, does not necessarily mean it is disordered.
by melancholiaphotography comprises public domain material.
For example, only about 4% of people in the United States have red hair, so red hair is considered an atypical characteristic (Figure), but it is not considered disordered, it’s just unusual. And it is less unusual in Scotland, where approximately 13% of the population has red hair (“DNA Project Aims,†2012). As you will learn, some disorders, although not exactly typical, are far from atypical, and the rates in which they appear in the population are surprisingly high.
If we can agree that merely being atypical is an insufficient criterion for a having a psychological disorder, is it reasonable to consider behavior or inner experiences that differ from widely expected cultural values or expectations as disordered? Using this criterion, a woman who walks around a subway platform wearing a heavy winter coat in July while screaming obscenities at strangers may be considered as exhibiting symptoms of a psychological disorder. Her actions and clothes violate socially accepted rules governing appropriate dress and behavior; these characteristics are atypical.
Cultural Expectations
by comprises public domain materials.
Violating cultural expectations is not, in and of itself, a satisfactory means of identifying the presence of a psychological disorder. Since behavior varies from one culture to another, what may be expected and considered appropriate in one culture may not be viewed as such in other cultures. For example, returning a stranger’s smile is expected in the United States because a pervasive social norm dictates that we reciprocate friendly gestures. A person who refuses to acknowledge such gestures might be considered socially awkward—perhaps even disordered—for violating this expectation. However, such expectations are not universally shared. Cultural expectations in Japan involve showing reserve, restraint, and a concern for maintaining privacy around strangers. Japanese people are generally unresponsive to smiles from strangers (Patterson et al., 2007). Eye contact provides another example. In the United States and Europe, eye contact with others typically signifies honesty and attention. However, most Latin-American, Asian, and African cultures interpret direct eye contact as rude, confrontational, and aggressive (Pazain, 2010). Thus, someone who makes eye contact with you could be considered appropriate and respectful or brazen and offensive, depending on your culture.
Hallucinations (seeing or hearing things that are not physically present) in West.
This research is based on general practice in the psychiatric institutions. It involves a qualitative research method that that uses three peer-reviewed journal article containing information about the scope of psychiatry, emerging issues in accommodating patients and highlight on medication of mental illness
Classics in the History of Psychology Aninternet resource .docxbartholomeocoombs
Classics in the History of Psychology
An
internet resource developed by
Christopher D.
Green
York University, Toronto, Ontario
ISSN 1492-3713
(Return to index)
The Myth of Mental Illness
By
Thomas S. Szasz (1960)
First published in American Psychologist, 15,
113-118.
Posted
January 2002
My aim in this essay is to raise the question "Is there such a thing as mental
illness?" and to argue that there is not. Since the notion of mental
illness is extremely widely used nowadays, inquiry into the ways in which this
term is employed would seem to be especially indicated. Mental illness, of course, is not literally a
"thing" -- or physical object -- and hence it can "exist"
only in the same sort of way in which other theoretical concepts exist. Yet,
familiar theories are in the habit of posing, sooner or later -- at least to
those who come to believe in them -- as "objective truths" (or
"facts"). During certain
historical periods, explanatory conceptions such as deities, witches, and
microorganisms appeared not only as theories but as self-evident causes of
a vast number of events. I submit that
today mental illness is widely regarded in a somewhat similar fashion, that is,
as the cause of innumerable diverse happenings.
As an antidote to the complacent use of the notion of mental illness --
whether as a self-evident phenomenon, theory, or cause--let us ask this
question: What is meant when it is asserted that someone is mentally ill?
In what follows I shall describe briefly the main uses to
which the concept of mental illness has been put. I shall argue that this notion has outlived
whatever usefulness it might have had and that it now functions merely as a
convenient myth.
MENTAL ILLNESS AS A SIGN OF BRAIN DISEASE
The notion of mental illness derives it
main sup- port from such phenomena as syphilis of the brain or delirious
conditions-intoxications, for instance -- in which persons are known to
manifest various peculiarities or disorders of thinking and behavior. Correctly
speaking, however, these are diseases of the brain, not of the mind. According to one school of thought, all
so-called mental illness is of this type.
The assumption is made that some neurological defect, perhaps a very
subtle one, will ultimately be found for all the disorders of thinking and
behavior. Many contemporary psychiatrists, physicians, and other
scientists hold this view. This position
implies that people cannot have troubles -- expressed in what are now
called "mental illnesses" -- because of differences in personal
needs, opinions, social aspirations, values, and so on. All problems in living are attributed
to physicochemical processes which in due time will be discovered by medical research.
"Mental illnesses" are thus regarded as basically no different than all other diseases (that is,
of the body). The only difference, in
this view, between mental and bodily diseases is that the former, affecting the
brain, manifest themselves by means of me.
A Critical Look at Clinical PsychologyThe .docxransayo
A Critical Look at Clinical Psychology
The DSM
“Patchwork of scientific data, cultural values, political compromises, and the material for making insurance claims”
The 1980 edition revision tried to mimic a biomedicine style
In Psychiatric diagnosis, etiology is rarely known
Reliability remains a big problem
The 1980 edition began to define conditions by listing symptoms. Revision was an effort to portray psychiatry as a branch of medicine which would boost credibility of the field and ensure financial viability. However in biomedicine, diagnosis are based on etiology > that is causes rather than symptoms. And they would then test for various causes of said symptoms. In psychiatric diagnosis, etiology, is rarely known. Ex. Schizophrenia (combination of things). Reliability remains a big problem with the DSM. Just because not every clinician may give the same individual the same diagnosis. -> could be due to cultural values, ethnicity or socioeconomic status.
Homosexuality
Multiple theories that classified homosexuality as a disease
Psychiatrist and psychoanalyst Edmund Bergler infamously wrote in a book for general audiences, “I have no bias against homosexuals; for me they are sick people requiring medical help... Still, though I have no bias, I would say: Homosexuals are essentially disagreeable people, regardless of their pleasant or unpleasant outward manner... [their] shell is a mixture of superciliousness, fake aggression, and whimpering. Like all psychic masochists, they are subservient when confronted with a stronger person, merciless when in power, unscrupulous about trampling on a weaker person”
On December 15, 1973, the Board of Directors of the APA declassified homosexuality per se as a mental disorder from the DSM-II
Judgements of Normality depend on social norms, cultural standards and local customs. Grief is another example. Talk about different cultures
Commercial for Cymbalta
Questions to ask after Video:
What are some things that you noticed within the video?
What are the explicit ideas expressed in this video?
What’s the overall message?
Political Economy of Clinical Psychology
1980’s revision involved “medicalization”
Adoption of the language of medicine. Including terms like: disease, symptoms, patient, syndrome, relapse, diagnosis and prognosis.
Introduction of managed care
Intrusion of pharmaceutical companies
Conflict of interest between pharmaceutical companies and psychiatrists
Drastic cuts in funds for mental health care
The 1980 revision of the DSM involved medicalization. Meaning they adopted the language of medicine to understand and describe psychological suffering. This language would include disease, symptoms, patient, syndrome, relapse, diagnosis and prognosis.So now that the field of psychiatry identified itself as a “medical” specialty, the research efforts concentrated on searching for biological bases of suffering and pharmaceutical treatments. Politica.
Dr. John Parker: The Lentegeur Spring: recovery and hope in a psychiatric ins...SACAP
The purpose of the Lentegeur Spring Foundation is to bring alive this beautiful name, helping
the hospital to evolve into a place that gives birth to hope through re-connection in every
possible way!
Psychiatrist and subject matter expert on the pervasive effects of sexual trauma, Dr. Koock Jung previously held lecturer and researcher positions at Albany Medical College. Dr. Koock Jung also wrote extensively on the links between post-traumatic stress disorder and experiences of sexual abuse.
People who have endured sexual trauma often develop long-lasting behavioral and cognitive patterns that can lead to an experience known as retraumatization. By definition, retraumatization occurs when a person relives their trauma due to environmental or circumstantial triggers that are similar to where the abuse took place. These triggers can often cause survivors to feel violated or vulnerable.
For example, routine procedures during a doctor’s examination or a police investigation can inadvertently retraumatize survivors. In recent years, health care providers, law enforcement officials, and mental health counselors are advised to apply a trauma-informed approach that emphasizes autonomy, trust, and respect when working with people who have experienced sexual assault.
Nobel Prize won for psychedelic meditation breakthroughPyotr Patrushev
Scientists win Nobel Prize for medicine for research into psychedelically catalyzed meditation (PCM) to combat drug and alcohol addiction, improve productivity and general well-being
KAFKAS ÜNİVERSİTESİ/KAFKAS UNIVERSITY
SOCIOLOGY
Course
LECTURE NOTES AND POWER POINT PRESENTATIONS
Prof.Dr. Halit Hami ÖZ
Kars, TURKEY
hamioz@yahoo.com
Definition of a Psychological DisorderIf you felt extremely depresseds.docxrosaliaj1
Definition of a Psychological Disorder
If you felt extremely depressed—so much so that you lost interest in activities, had difficulty eating or sleeping, felt utterly worthless, and contemplated suicide—your feelings would be atypical, would deviate from the norm, and could signify the presence of a psychological disorder. Just because something is atypical, however, does not necessarily mean it is disordered.
by melancholiaphotography comprises public domain material.
For example, only about 4% of people in the United States have red hair, so red hair is considered an atypical characteristic (Figure), but it is not considered disordered, it’s just unusual. And it is less unusual in Scotland, where approximately 13% of the population has red hair (“DNA Project Aims,†2012). As you will learn, some disorders, although not exactly typical, are far from atypical, and the rates in which they appear in the population are surprisingly high.
If we can agree that merely being atypical is an insufficient criterion for a having a psychological disorder, is it reasonable to consider behavior or inner experiences that differ from widely expected cultural values or expectations as disordered? Using this criterion, a woman who walks around a subway platform wearing a heavy winter coat in July while screaming obscenities at strangers may be considered as exhibiting symptoms of a psychological disorder. Her actions and clothes violate socially accepted rules governing appropriate dress and behavior; these characteristics are atypical.
Cultural Expectations
by comprises public domain materials.
Violating cultural expectations is not, in and of itself, a satisfactory means of identifying the presence of a psychological disorder. Since behavior varies from one culture to another, what may be expected and considered appropriate in one culture may not be viewed as such in other cultures. For example, returning a stranger’s smile is expected in the United States because a pervasive social norm dictates that we reciprocate friendly gestures. A person who refuses to acknowledge such gestures might be considered socially awkward—perhaps even disordered—for violating this expectation. However, such expectations are not universally shared. Cultural expectations in Japan involve showing reserve, restraint, and a concern for maintaining privacy around strangers. Japanese people are generally unresponsive to smiles from strangers (Patterson et al., 2007). Eye contact provides another example. In the United States and Europe, eye contact with others typically signifies honesty and attention. However, most Latin-American, Asian, and African cultures interpret direct eye contact as rude, confrontational, and aggressive (Pazain, 2010). Thus, someone who makes eye contact with you could be considered appropriate and respectful or brazen and offensive, depending on your culture.
Hallucinations (seeing or hearing things that are not physically present) in West.
This research is based on general practice in the psychiatric institutions. It involves a qualitative research method that that uses three peer-reviewed journal article containing information about the scope of psychiatry, emerging issues in accommodating patients and highlight on medication of mental illness
Classics in the History of Psychology Aninternet resource .docxbartholomeocoombs
Classics in the History of Psychology
An
internet resource developed by
Christopher D.
Green
York University, Toronto, Ontario
ISSN 1492-3713
(Return to index)
The Myth of Mental Illness
By
Thomas S. Szasz (1960)
First published in American Psychologist, 15,
113-118.
Posted
January 2002
My aim in this essay is to raise the question "Is there such a thing as mental
illness?" and to argue that there is not. Since the notion of mental
illness is extremely widely used nowadays, inquiry into the ways in which this
term is employed would seem to be especially indicated. Mental illness, of course, is not literally a
"thing" -- or physical object -- and hence it can "exist"
only in the same sort of way in which other theoretical concepts exist. Yet,
familiar theories are in the habit of posing, sooner or later -- at least to
those who come to believe in them -- as "objective truths" (or
"facts"). During certain
historical periods, explanatory conceptions such as deities, witches, and
microorganisms appeared not only as theories but as self-evident causes of
a vast number of events. I submit that
today mental illness is widely regarded in a somewhat similar fashion, that is,
as the cause of innumerable diverse happenings.
As an antidote to the complacent use of the notion of mental illness --
whether as a self-evident phenomenon, theory, or cause--let us ask this
question: What is meant when it is asserted that someone is mentally ill?
In what follows I shall describe briefly the main uses to
which the concept of mental illness has been put. I shall argue that this notion has outlived
whatever usefulness it might have had and that it now functions merely as a
convenient myth.
MENTAL ILLNESS AS A SIGN OF BRAIN DISEASE
The notion of mental illness derives it
main sup- port from such phenomena as syphilis of the brain or delirious
conditions-intoxications, for instance -- in which persons are known to
manifest various peculiarities or disorders of thinking and behavior. Correctly
speaking, however, these are diseases of the brain, not of the mind. According to one school of thought, all
so-called mental illness is of this type.
The assumption is made that some neurological defect, perhaps a very
subtle one, will ultimately be found for all the disorders of thinking and
behavior. Many contemporary psychiatrists, physicians, and other
scientists hold this view. This position
implies that people cannot have troubles -- expressed in what are now
called "mental illnesses" -- because of differences in personal
needs, opinions, social aspirations, values, and so on. All problems in living are attributed
to physicochemical processes which in due time will be discovered by medical research.
"Mental illnesses" are thus regarded as basically no different than all other diseases (that is,
of the body). The only difference, in
this view, between mental and bodily diseases is that the former, affecting the
brain, manifest themselves by means of me.
A Critical Look at Clinical PsychologyThe .docxransayo
A Critical Look at Clinical Psychology
The DSM
“Patchwork of scientific data, cultural values, political compromises, and the material for making insurance claims”
The 1980 edition revision tried to mimic a biomedicine style
In Psychiatric diagnosis, etiology is rarely known
Reliability remains a big problem
The 1980 edition began to define conditions by listing symptoms. Revision was an effort to portray psychiatry as a branch of medicine which would boost credibility of the field and ensure financial viability. However in biomedicine, diagnosis are based on etiology > that is causes rather than symptoms. And they would then test for various causes of said symptoms. In psychiatric diagnosis, etiology, is rarely known. Ex. Schizophrenia (combination of things). Reliability remains a big problem with the DSM. Just because not every clinician may give the same individual the same diagnosis. -> could be due to cultural values, ethnicity or socioeconomic status.
Homosexuality
Multiple theories that classified homosexuality as a disease
Psychiatrist and psychoanalyst Edmund Bergler infamously wrote in a book for general audiences, “I have no bias against homosexuals; for me they are sick people requiring medical help... Still, though I have no bias, I would say: Homosexuals are essentially disagreeable people, regardless of their pleasant or unpleasant outward manner... [their] shell is a mixture of superciliousness, fake aggression, and whimpering. Like all psychic masochists, they are subservient when confronted with a stronger person, merciless when in power, unscrupulous about trampling on a weaker person”
On December 15, 1973, the Board of Directors of the APA declassified homosexuality per se as a mental disorder from the DSM-II
Judgements of Normality depend on social norms, cultural standards and local customs. Grief is another example. Talk about different cultures
Commercial for Cymbalta
Questions to ask after Video:
What are some things that you noticed within the video?
What are the explicit ideas expressed in this video?
What’s the overall message?
Political Economy of Clinical Psychology
1980’s revision involved “medicalization”
Adoption of the language of medicine. Including terms like: disease, symptoms, patient, syndrome, relapse, diagnosis and prognosis.
Introduction of managed care
Intrusion of pharmaceutical companies
Conflict of interest between pharmaceutical companies and psychiatrists
Drastic cuts in funds for mental health care
The 1980 revision of the DSM involved medicalization. Meaning they adopted the language of medicine to understand and describe psychological suffering. This language would include disease, symptoms, patient, syndrome, relapse, diagnosis and prognosis.So now that the field of psychiatry identified itself as a “medical” specialty, the research efforts concentrated on searching for biological bases of suffering and pharmaceutical treatments. Politica.
Running head RESEARCH PROPOSAL10RESEARCH PROPOSAL 8.docxtoltonkendal
Running head: RESEARCH PROPOSAL 10
RESEARCH PROPOSAL 8
Research Proposal
Jamie Bass
Argosy University
March 3, 2016
ABSTRACT
Suicide is experienced in all parts of parts of the world. Even though it has been argued that suicide is common amongst the elderly in the society, it is worth noting that even children as young as 13 years old have committed suicide. The myths and misconceptions surrounding suicidal individuals are inherently different from one culture to another. For instance, in some cultures it is believed that suicidal individuals are possessed by demons. Other cultures attribute suicide to generational curses whereas other cultures attribute suicide to such factors as depression and other mental disorders. The purpose of the proposed research is to establish the risk factors of suicide and realize possible strategies which if undertaken can help to counteract suicide and hence its adverse effects in the society. In this proposal are the points to be addressed in the course of the research. It is anticipated that there will be objections to the factors to be established and hence part of this proposal are possible objections and how each of the possible objections will be addressed. The research will use secondary sources of information and hence part of this proposal is an annotated bibliography of the sources that will be utilized in course of the research. Comment by Spencer Ellsworth: This is good, but could you state it more as a piece of argumentation? Like “This paper argues that early intervention can prevent suicide if done correctly.”
WORKING THESIS
Suicide has negatively affected the society, and unless there are mitigation strategies to curb this menace, it will continue to take the lives of many people in the society.
EXPLANATION
Suicide is the act of human beings voluntarily taking their lives. Research has shown that it has always been caused by a sense of despair or hopelessness. All these issues may be induced by mental illness which may include Bipolar disorder or even depression. Suicide has been traumatizing and shameful to the bereaved families and many people in the society have always viewed it as a cowardice way of taking one’s life. Many suicidal persons have been haunted by their thoughts in many cases this is depicted as a very personal process (Goldsmith, Pellmar, Kleinman & Bunney, 2002).
In this paper, it is very much possible to look at what suicide is and the risk factors associated with suicide. A study conducted in Sweden consisting of 271 men aged 15 years and above revealed that mental disorder is a major suicide risk factor. It is thus recommended that the research paper will dwell on mental disorder and substance abuse as risk factors that contribute to suicide as well as medical conditions and psychosocial states. Harris & Barraclough (2009) also established a causal relationship between mental disorder and suicide a factor that further makes the proposed research ...
Social Psychiatry Comes of Age - Inaugural Column in Psychiatric TimesUniversité de Montréal
In this inaugural column on “Second Thoughts… About Psychiatry, Psychology, and Psychotherapy,” I want to express second thoughts about my profession in a warm and constructive way.
https://www.psychiatrictimes.com/view/social-psychiatry-comes-of-age
"Badiou, the Event, and Psychiatry. Part I: Trauma and Event" - Di Nicola - A...Université de Montréal
"Badiou, the Event, and Psychiatry" by Vincenzo Di Nicola Part I: Trauma and Event. Part II: Psychiatry of the Event This online blog of the American Philosophical Association is an overview of my work with French philosopher Alain Badiou for my doctoral dissertation ("Trauma and Event: A Philosophical Archaeology," Di Nicola, 2012) and my subsequent elaboration of his theory of the event to announce an "Evental psychiatry."
Link: https://blog.apaonline.org/2017/11/23/badiou-the-event-and-psychiatry-part-1-trauma-and-event/
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Similar to Dr. Thomas Szasz's Critique of Psychiatry (13)
1. Dr. Thomas Szasz's Critique of Psychiatry
Dr. Szasz may be debating your psychiatric profession regarding decades, calling this health-related
specialty any "pseudoscience." Inside among his 1st forays, he claimed that will what we call mental
illnesses aren't diseases from all, yet "problems within living."
"Mental illness can become a myth whose operate is usually to disguise
http://www.neuroscience.pitt.edu/ and so render much more palatable the particular corporate
coaching bitter pill associated with moral conflicts within human relations," said Szasz.
Szasz: The Libertarian Skeptic
Thomas Szasz is Professor Emeritus involving Psychiatry in the State University Or College
associated with Ny Well Being Science Middle within Syracuse, New York. An outspoken critic
2. regarding psychiatry, Szasz provides frequently infuriated his peers. Although current trends inside
psychiatry and also neuroscience apparently strengthen the theory of the biological basis for mental
illness, Szasz features most likely "...done a lot more than some other man for you to alert the
American public towards the potential risks of an excessively psychiatrized society," in accordance
with Edwin Shurr within the Atlantic Monthly.
"The classification of (mis)behavior as illness provides an ideological justification with regard to
state-sponsored social control," mentioned Szasz.
The entire body regarding Szasz's jobs are prodigious, as well as includes publications as well as
posts published over the past half century questioning the actual role regarding the state within
mental health, specifically its legal implications for individuals. Szasz believes the partnership
among any mental wellness practitioner and patient ought to be contractual. some associated with
his much more contentious tips contain his opposition to psychiatric coercion within mental illness,
his views on assisted suicide, and the criticism associated with labeling as well as medicating kids
with Interest Deficit Disorder.
Biology with the Brain
In the particular last few decades, neuroscience features gained your upper hand inside the fantastic
debate around the origins regarding mental illness. "Evidence with the biological time frame
associated with mental illness would appear to become so overwhelming which to doubt can be akin
to doubting evolution," wrote Jeffrey Oliver regarding Szasz throughout the New Atlantis.
Psychiatry has produced progess within proving in which diseases involving the mind arise coming
from biological/physiological brings about in the same manner diseases regarding the body tend to
be the end result of disorders involving bodily organs. Several in the psychiatric profession view
Szasz yet others who oppose them, such because the Anti-Psychiatry movement, as irresponsible and
also dangerous. most individuals agree psychiatrists which use the law in order to coerce those
deemed mentally ill do this using the best interests with the affected person throughout mind.
Beyond the particular Diagnostic and Statistical Manual associated with Mental Disorders
Despite the medical advances manufactured in recent a prolonged time in the biology involving
mental illness, nearly almost all of the things outlined in the "Holy Bible" of the psychiatric
profession, the Diagnostic as well as Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, depend on behavioral
observations. Your danger lies in the power with the medical/psychiatric profession to always be
able to define arbitrarily what behaviors are usually sick. The Particular challenge is always to boost
patients' legal rights in order to bodily and also mental self-ownership and also the proper to be free
of state violence.
3. Dr. Szasz, although deemed by many in his profession as a "failed revolutionary", has provided a
legal and also moral framework to be able to analyze potential abuses in what he deemed being a
new "Therapeutic State".
Sources along with Links
Thomas S. Szasz Cybercenter for Liberty along with Responsibility
Curing the particular Therapeutic State: Thomas Szasz interviewed by simply Jacob Sullum,
ReasonOnline, July, 2000.
The Myth of Thomas Szasz, simply by Jeffrey Oliver, The Newest Atlantis, Summer, 2006.