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Psychiatry

The Science of Lies

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Psychiatry

By: Thomas Szasz
Narrated by: Tom Weiner
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Summary

For more than half a century, Thomas Szasz has devoted much of his career to a radical critique of psychiatry. His latest work, Psychiatry: The Science of Lies, is a culmination of his life’s work: to portray the integral role of deception in the history and practice of psychiatry.

Szasz argues that the diagnosis and treatment of mental illness stands in the same relationship to the diagnosis and treatment of bodily illness that the forgery of a painting does to the original masterpiece. Art historians and the legal system seek to distinguish forgeries from originals. Those concerned with medicine, on the other hand - physicians, patients, politicians, health-insurance providers, and legal professionals - take the opposite stance when faced with the challenge of distinguishing everyday problems in living from bodily diseases, systematically authenticating non-diseases as diseases. The boundary between disease and non-disease - genuine and imitation, truth and falsehood - thus becomes arbitrary and uncertain.

There is neither glory nor profit in correctly demarcating what counts as medical illness and medical healing from what does not. Individuals and families wishing to protect themselves from medically and politically authenticated charlatanry are left to their own intellectual and moral resources to make critical decisions about human dilemmas miscategorized as “mental diseases” and about medicalized responses misidentified as “psychiatric treatments.”

Delivering his sophisticated analysis in lucid prose and with a sharp wit, Szasz continues to engage and challenge readers of all backgrounds.

Thomas Szasz is professor emeritus of psychiatry at the State University of New York’s Upstate Medical University in Syracuse, New York.

©2008 Thomas Szasz (P)2010 Blackstone Audio, Inc.
Mental Health Psychology Psychology & Mental Health Health Law New York Crime Medicine
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Critic reviews

"[Thomas Szasz] is the preeminent critic of psychiatry in the world." (Richard Vatz, Ph.D., Professor of Rhetoric and Communication, Towson University)
All stars
Most relevant
Thomas Szasz tales a while to make his final point, but he makes it well. Lord Acton said that power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. He was referring to the Pope's declared infallibility at the end of the 29th century. The doctrine of separation of church and state has mitigated this power however. Religion is for the most part voluntary. However the state and psychiatry collude to give psychiatrists power to incarcerate based on a diagnosis. The diagnosis is the disease and is unfalsifyable. There is no separation of psychiatry and state to mitigate this power.
He backs this argument up with an insightful analogy of the forgery of artworks. The difference however is that the forger knows his painting is fake, The psychiatrist not. Once the psychiatric label is attached to the patient, a trusting person who went to the psychiatrist for help, he is forever damned to be the label.
My work is to help people free themselves from the drugs prescribed by psychiatrists. This is no easy task and can take a year or more. Yet the biggest challenge for my clients, is to realise that they are not the label for instance the bipolar or the depressive. They are humans who reacted to something that happened to them. They can recover. It is bit a life sentence.
Saasz provides valuable insight into this phenomenon.

The Church of Psychiatry

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Interesting story with Socio cultural and philosophical components. But lacking in hard detail and completely neglects the biological and genetic preservations. Especially of the more severe end of the spectrum.

Interesting, but poorly evidenced.

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In "Psychiatry: The Science of Lies", Thomas Szasz argues that psychiatry is not about mental illness: it is about lies. Mental illnesses are in general not specified in terms of structural or chemical changes in the human body. Rather they are specified in terms of behaviour. So there are no objective tests for mental illness before or after a person dies. They are literally just labels for behaviour that people dislike. The point of such a label is to deny the moral agency of the person diagnosed with that label. Sometimes a mental patient seeks out this status to get drugs they want or to avoid prison after committing a crime. Sometimes somebody else seeks to impose the label on the mental patient because the mental patient's behaviour is deemed inconvenient. So psychiatry is about people lying to one another, and to themselves. The book is well written and is narrated well by Tom Weiner.

A good summary of Szasz's criticism of psychiatry

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While I am a firm believer that there is mental illness and that it affects the physiological health as well, more and more evident by research, the author has a point. That point is that psychiatry has too much power and that personal responsibility is played down and deception is almost the norm in some careers and positions, politics being my obvious prime example.

A perspective that may raise eyebrows

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Ok so I added a couple of more stars as I realised my biases were effecting the way I listened.
Now although I still don’t agree the mental illness is not real I DO understand what he is saying and a lot of what he says is actually true.

I don’t know, this one takes some serious analytical skill.

Edited review

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