Silently orienting us to the world are traditions embedded in
our language. These traditions shape how we understand the
necessities and possibilities of life and truth. Dualism, a
metaphysical theory, is such a tradition, and, in Keen's view, the
separate discourses of science and morality create double meanings
in our experience. Psychopharmacology is a critical intersection of
these two worlds, where physical compounds are used to change
mental life. Increasingly, the language of neurochemistry
formulates that treatment. To control ennui with chemicals is to
direct our attention away from what is wrong in our lives and to
focus instead on what we can control easily, by taking a pill.
Mental life has become marginal in biologically reductionistic
discourse. While the demystification of human consciousness is
surely a cornerstone of modernity, in excess it indulges a world
design where nothing is sacred and everything becomes just another
phenomenon to which we owe nothing. Our practice of manipulating
consciousness as an object surrenders the complex reflections of
moral ambiguity and struggle. Following the example of our doctors,
Keen asserts, we the population neglect what is wrong in our lives.
Like the rest of nature, our minds become exploitable. And
properties of consciousness become commodities sold by prescription
in drug stores. A provocative analysis of psychopharmacology this
will be of interest to treatment professionals, from psychologists,
psychiatrists, and nurses to social workers, as well as the
interested public.
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