It's not crap. There is no logic of modern psychology that says I'm suffering from Christianity because we don't have a reason to chart the vectors that encompass it.
Now you're making
less than no sense. You say there is, now you say, *hah!* there isn't!
Yeah, you showed me.
I have no idea how to approach many of your statements, because I have a lot of problems putting my finger on what you're actually saying. You appear to go in circles a lot, and I don't know which ones are part of your argument, and which are thrown out without forethought just to be contrarian.
You say, this, that, then the opposite, then something unrelated... I'm really struggling here.
Of course not. My wife helps people. That doesn't change the fact that we have core philosophical differences. Nor does it change the fact that out of all the members of our shared family, I am the most sympathetic and compassionate to her "bi-polar" father.
I don't get it then. How can she help people with what you assert are unsubstantiated lies?
Or are you saying she's not working within her field of study? ie: not a psychologist?
I said:
ie: Stakeholders? Experts? Is this unexpected? Again, we see this with evolution-deniers: "The only people defending evolution are these scientitsts - what's with that, hmmm?"
You tell me?
My point was that when people run out of good arguments, they resort to
ad hominem attacks. Sometimes they backfire, because they prove that they are missing the scientific value placed on expertise and experience.
Is this why you brought it up? You ran out of good arguments? Do you honestly think that expertise is a disqualifier?
I have no knowledge of Szasz religious sentiments. If you dislike him, then read Mad Travelers or Multiple Personality Disorders and the Politics of Memory, both by Ian Hacking.
I've read them, and my opinion is that just like "Mr. Post" is a good name for a mailman,
Hacking is a good name for somebody who produces such shoddy books.
Another problem is that minor quibbles do not a medical specialty destroy. In particular, the latter book talks about what may be about 50 patients in marginal diagnoses, compared to the whole system, which has tens of millions of people under very solid diagnoses. It's like saying that because some people are occasionally misdiagnoses with slipped discs when they have a spinal tumour, that medicine obviously doesn't work.
Not surprising given the subject matter.
No, you're not getting away that easy. I was pointing out you've been contradicting yourself. I think you have a weak grasp on the topic, and are getting scrambled.
I'm investing time here, and when I show that you're contradicting yourself and you say "that proves my point!", I start to suspect that you're deliberately wasting my time. It starts to look like a troll.
Of course I would make a somewhat similar argument for both "species" and "intelligence." I'm sure you are familiar with this:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scientific_essentialism
This has nothing to do with my example. I was talking about phylogeny. The Wikipedia entry is not addressing phylogeny debates. 'tigers' isn't even a species: it's a genera. Scientific essentialism is an extension of Aristotlean prototyping, and is a philosophical rather than scientific tool.
The reason I brought up Tigers, is that there's nothing substantially different than lions. The only difference is fur colour and some
behavioral traits (ie: tigers are more independent, and swim). They can, however, breed successfully with lions, and often do, producing ligons. The reason they're considered diffrent genera is because when we're little, we're told the striped ones are tigers and the yellow ones are lions.
There is more substantial genetic variation between poodles and bouvier de flanders, but we not only assign them the same genera: we assign them the same species! This is because the scientific activity of species assignment is largely arbitrary. (there are whole schools of approach called 'lumpers' versus 'splitters')
But it doesn't prevent the concept of species from being scientific.
One primary difference though is that we pull moods out of subjectivism and tigers from empiricism. Making it even more difficult to classify things appropriately.
We do not pull tigers from 'empiricism'. That's the point. We have arbitrarily called them a 'different' animal than lions because of our cultural background. Same with wolves and dogs, or, by comparison, even varieties of dogs.
Same with planets and 'trans-neptunian objects'. Moons versus minor satellites. Rivers versus creeks. Cobbles versus stones. Scree versus talus. Lakes versus seas. Epochs versus eras.
In medicine, it's major versus minor surgery, diagnoses that involve MD judgement ('guarding', 'firm', 'feels inflamed', 'limited mobility'). It's *exactly* how science and medicine are done.
You've conceded that stuff like pain, &c are completely legitemate medical concepts, but completely impossible to detect empirically. Why are you making a special exception for psychiatry?
Arguably, pain is much
less scientific than pain management, since there's no objective measure. Whereas, psychiatry has many objective measures, which I have listed in previous posts (eg: the reports of trained observers against a standardized checklist).
I wrote:
Just because there isn't a clear distinction between moods and mood disorders (extreme moods) doesn't mean that there is no distinction.
What it means is that there is a distinction because we chose to make one.
Yeessss. Like the science examples I mentioned above. Go on....
I wrote:
There is no clear distinction between child and adolescent, adolescent and adult, but we have no reservation about saying that children shouldn't drive on the freeway. It's a little blendy in the middle, but denying that they're different things is a logical fallacy.
Again, it all comes back to what we do with the distinction we make, right? It says nothing about a geniune distinction.
Yeessss. Like the science examples I mentioned above. Go on....
I never claimed to have a scientific argument, only a philosophical problem when the dogma which says it is scientific to believe in one set of things that don't empirically exist verses any other set of things, which may or may not be of equal value but are never tested due to what we deem to be of value.
I think you're making stuff up now. Psychiatry is psychiatry. It's medicine. Nobody claims it's science. It is, however, like medicine, supported by the same type of scientific findings, such as the utility of diagnosis for directing treatment.
Again, this is the reification argument. Science doesn't know if
anything exists. Electrons are a model that fits the data. Evolution is a model that fits the data. These are still scientific, because they are the product of a scientific method.
Psychiatry is a product of the scientific method, so it is as
real as electrons. Which is to say: who knows, but let's put the filosofizin aside and treat some patients.
I repeat the question: since psychiatry is
as scientifically based as other medical fields, and probably more scientific than even some subfields within science, why are you singling it out for the universal problem of reification?
There is no scientific fact that we must reduce suffering. We have a moral obligation to do so. Unless (or perhaps until) it can be demonstrated that my moods carry an equal empirical weight as my blood (which incidently I can see, smell, and taste) then I doubt seriously you can convince me that we are talking about the same things with the same level of objectivity.
Well, see, this is just silly. The whole point of the scientific method is that the senses are the definition of subjectivity, whereas, scientific testing provides us with more objectivity.
You can't see, touch, or taste electrons. You can't see, touch, or taste Ancient Rome or planets around distant stars. We know these things exist through other means.
That's what the scientific method is for: developing models for knowledge that do not rely on our faulty senses.
Is that why many communities used to care for their own mentally ill before psychiatry came along, as opposed to keeping them drugged and locked away from the "normal" people?
A fantasy.
The reality is that the mentally ill of the world have been historically marginalized and preyed upon by opportunists within their community. Especially the mentally delayed and psychotic. In prior cultures, these are the most likely to be abandoned or subjected to infanticide. In modern primitive cultures (which are sometimes used as a model for ancestral hunter-gatherers,) the trend is consistent with our historical observations. The mentally deficient do not last long outside the Western hegemony.
(It helps to have an ex-wife whose anthropology masters thesis was in the management of health problems in stone age societies)
Our ancestors mostly regarded the mentally ill just as much a 'burden' as they did the physically ill, and treated them accordingly. Depending on what era you're talking about (ie: primitive tribes such as first nations in BC (my ex-wife's specialty) would usually just reallocate resources away from these weaker community prospects, in favour of the more likely producers versus, say, civilizations such as Rome or Egypt, where infanticide was more cut-and-dried)
My ex's family totem was the Wild Woman of the Woods, whose legend is about a girl who was abandoned in the woods because she was a disobedient child, and grew up to be a spirit-woman.
As I pointed out, my current wife (a psychiatrist) spent quite some time in Tobago, where the people are living the same life they did 500 years ago, and the usual treatment of the mentally ill appears to be exploitation, shunning, and murder. My wife is from a nearby island of St. Vincent, where things are totally different *because* they have a functioning psychiatry service.
I am unusual in that I have both a PhD in science (Immunology/Research methodology) and a BA in psychology (family dynamics). My impression is that psychiatry is much more scientific than psychology in that it relies on the same standards of research as does the rest of medicine, whereas psychology is more about narratives, and borders on anthropology in some ways. Depends on the specialty.
As an immunologist, I am more satisfied with the levels of confidence generated by the DSMIVR than I am with many lab tests in my own field.