Books > Social sciences > Psychology > Abnormal psychology
|
Buy Now
Madness Explained - Psychosis and Human Nature (Paperback, New Ed)
Loot Price: R375
Discovery Miles 3 750
You Save: R82
(18%)
|
|
Madness Explained - Psychosis and Human Nature (Paperback, New Ed)
(3 ratings, sign in to rate)
List price R457
Loot Price R375
Discovery Miles 3 750
You Save R82 (18%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
|
Challenges to the medical approach to madness have a long history.
R D Laing promoted the anti-psychiatry movement. Thomas Szasz
claimed that mental illness was a myth. In this comprehensively
researched overview of madness, Bentall takes a step further along
the road to dissent, suggesting that psychiatric diagnoses should
be abandoned in favour to trying to explain and understand the
behaviour of psychotic people. Emil Kraepelin, founder of the
conventional approach, continues to occupy a Newtonian position in
psychiatry. Bentall argues that it's time to give his pedestal a
shove and undertake some serious revisions of orthodox
understandings. He advocates the symptom-orientated approach. To
understand madness one needs multiple perspectives including the
psychological, sociological and anthropological. Examining the
failure of some of the theories about schizophrenia and manic
depression proposed by the neo-Kraepelin school, he tackles the
thorny problem of biological explanations of psychosis. Substantial
advances in technology have enabled brain researchers to see
psychiatry as simply a branch of physical medicine. As challenging
and exciting as these advances are, researchers still need to
understand individuals from social and psychological perspectives.
The strong evidence that brain functions may be shaped by
experience emphasizes that people possess a 'mind-brain' that is
very unlike a computer - it's a living system. The first part of
the book is devoted to a damning picture of Kraepelin psychiatry;
the second half demonstrates how psychological theories can be used
to explain many of the strange behaviours both inside and outside
of psychiatric clinics. There are chapters on the psychology of the
emotions, on depression, on mania and the pathology of the self, a
discourse on the language of madness and an examination of the
roots of incoherence. Throughout, the author looks at both
historical background and current theories. He provides brief
explanations of concepts which may be unfamiliar to the lay reader,
examines the case studies of others as well as his own and puts
together tentative models, helpfully illustrated with simple
diagrams. He draws attention to accounts that are speculative and
underlines where he feels on more solid ground. The central
argument of the book is that the problems involved in exploring
madness will disappear once we have adequately explained the
complaints that lead to these diagnoses. If the boundaries between
madness and normality are open to negotiation and if current
psychiatric services are imperfect and sometimes damaging, why not
help some psychotic people just to accept that they are different
from the rest of us? asks Bentall. He describes a deliberate
attempt to move these boundaries in Holland, where people who hear
voices are accepted as being to the far right of the normal
behavioural continuum rather than suffering from a disease. It
would have been interesting to continue this debate, querying
whether a tolerance for eccentricity by earlier generations in our
own country has now been supplanted by an intolerance for what is
considered anti-social behaviour. Nevertheless, Professor Bentall
has succeeded in marshalling a large volume of scientific evidence
against orthodox models of understanding and treatment and takes a
firm stand against the dehumanization of the individual. (Kirkus
UK)
THIS BOOK WILL EXPLAIN WHAT MADNESS IS, TO SHOW THAT IT CAN BE
UNDERSTOOD IN PSYCHOLOGICAL TERMS, AND THAT BY STUDYING IT WE CAN
LEARN IMPORTANT INSIGHTS ABOUT THE NORMAL MIND. THE BOOK WILL ARGUE
THAT TRADITIONAL APPROACHES TO MADNESS MUST BE ABANDONED IN FAVOUR
OF A NEW APPROACH WHICH IS MORE CONSISTENT WITH THAT WE NOW KNOW
ABOUT THE HUMAN MIND. OVER THE LAST CENTURY OR SO IT HAS BECOME SO
COMMONPLACE TO REGARD MADNESS SIMPLY AS A MEDICAL CONDITION THAT IT
HAS BECOME DIFFICULT TO THINK OF IT IN ANY OTHER WAY. BENTALL
ARGUES INSTEAD THAT DELUSIONS, HALLUCINATIONS AND OTHER UNUSUAL
BEHAVIOURS ARE BEST UNDERSTOOD PSYCHOLOGICALLY, AND THAT SUCH
EXPERIENCES FOR THE MOST PART REPRESENT EXAGGERATIONS OF MENTAL
FOIBLES TO WHICH WE ARE ALL PRONE.
General
Is the information for this product incomplete, wrong or inappropriate?
Let us know about it.
Does this product have an incorrect or missing image?
Send us a new image.
Is this product missing categories?
Add more categories.
Review This Product
No reviews yet - be the first to create one!
|
You might also like..
|
Email address subscribed successfully.
A activation email has been sent to you.
Please click the link in that email to activate your subscription.