Excuse me?
Aug. 3rd, 2004 09:59 amBut playtime isn't always this carefree, because Taylor is one of the thousands of children across America who struggle with mental illnesses. Taylor has been diagnosed with a bipolar disorder, attention-deficit (hyperactivity) disorder, hyperactivity and Asperger syndrome, a form of autism.
None of these things are classified as mental illnesses. That's because they aren't illnesses, of any sort, least of all the "mental" kind, which tends to imply insanity.
None of these things are classified as mental illnesses. That's because they aren't illnesses, of any sort, least of all the "mental" kind, which tends to imply insanity.
no subject
Date: 2004-08-03 10:14 am (UTC)Curing The Therapeutic State (http://reason.com/0007/fe.js.curing.shtml)
"Mental illness is a myth whose function is to disguise and thus render more palatable the bitter pill of moral conflicts in human relations," Szasz wrote in "The Myth of Mental Illness," a paper that appeared in American Psychologist the year before his book of the same name (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0060911514/ref=pd_sxp_elt_l1/002-1831656-9678403) was published. "In asserting that there is no such thing as mental illness, I do not deny that people have problems coping with life and each other." Likewise, Szasz has never denied that organic conditions--say, Alzheimer's disease or untreated syphilis--can have an impact on thought and behavior. But he insists on evidence of an underlying physical defect, and he emphasizes that behavior itself is never a disease. "Classifying thoughts, feelings, and behaviors as diseases is a logical and semantic error, like classifying the whale as a fish," he writes on his Web site (http://www.szasz.com).
This error has serious consequences, Szasz argues: "The classification of (mis)behavior as illness provides an ideological justification for state-sponsored social control." As he put it in his 1990 book The Untamed Tongue (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN%3D0812691040/reasonmagazine/002-1831656-9678403), "What people nowadays call mental illness, especially in a legal context, is not a fact, but a strategy; not a condition, but a policy; in short it is not a disease that the alleged patient has, but a decision which those who call him mentally ill make about how to act toward him, whether he likes it or not."
no subject
Date: 2004-08-03 11:22 am (UTC)But the article raises a valid and important point about how language is used as a strategy for social manipulation. I still believe that bipolar disorder is a mental illness, because it's usually caused by a chemical imbalance in the brain, but I certainly acknowledge that the way I described some other mental ailments as being "messy" at best.
I also stand by the way I've defined the terms as being in fairly common usage, whether or not they're accurate or politically correct according to Dr. Szasz.
no subject
Date: 2004-08-09 07:44 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-08-03 11:46 am (UTC)I agree, I have all was diagnosed as ADHD by my school. In my case the school wanted to intervene by "encouraging" medicine to treat the "illness" and "encouraging" placement in special ed. I was not suicidal or violent, simply annoying (talking during class, chasing people during recess, etc.) and "weird" (avoiding eye contact, becoming obessesed with things). In my opinion medicine should be a last resort, when I was on Ritalin the side effects were awful and I always felt drugged, it was also difficult to quit. Now that I'm off it I might still be "weird" or "annoying", but that's not a disease in my opinion. My parents also switched schools when the original school wanted to place me in special ed, ironically the new school placed me in gifted. So many famous inventors and scientists would be diagnosed with a "mental illness" if they were placed in school today, when really their only "illness" is being different.