|
The Myth of Mental Illness
Next articles: What is Narcissism - Narcissism is a pattern of traits and behaviours which signify infatuation and obsession with one's self to the exclusion of all others and the egotistic and ruthless pursuit of one's gratification, dominance and ambition.
Personality Disorders - Axis II personality disorders are deeply ingrained, maladaptive, lifelong behavior patterns.
The Narcissist and His Family - Is there a "typical" relationship between the narcissist and his family?
The Legacy of Sexual Abuse - During the many years I've been counseling people, I've worked with many people who were sexually abused as children. Some of them remember it all their lives, while...
Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder - Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) is a condition that becomes apparent in some children in the preschool and early school years. It is hard for these...
|
Written by Sam Vaknin
"You
can know the name of a bird in all the languages of the world, but when you're
finished, you'll know absolutely nothing whatever about the bird
So let's look
at the bird and see what it's doing that's what counts. I learned very early
the difference between knowing the name of something and knowing
something."
Richard Feynman, Physicist
and 1965 Nobel Prize laureate (1918-1988)
"You
have all I dare say heard of the animal spirits and how they are transfused from
father to son etcetera etcetera well you may take my word that nine parts in
ten of a man's sense or his nonsense, his successes and miscarriages in this
world depend on their motions and activities, and the different tracks and
trains you put them into, so that when they are once set a-going, whether right
or wrong, away they go cluttering like hey-go-mad."
Lawrence Sterne (1713-1758), "The Life and Opinions of Tristram
Shandy, Gentleman" (1759)
I. Overview
Someone is considered mentally "ill" if:
-
His conduct rigidly and consistently deviates from the typical,
average behaviour of all other people in his culture and society that fit his
profile (whether this conventional behaviour is moral or rational is
immaterial), or
-
His judgment and grasp of objective, physical reality is
impaired, and
-
His conduct is not a matter of choice but is innate and
irresistible, and
-
His behavior causes him or others discomfort, and is
-
Dysfunctional, self-defeating, and self-destructive even by his
own yardsticks.
Descriptive criteria
aside, what is the essence of mental disorders? Are they merely
physiological disorders of the brain, or, more precisely of its chemistry? If
so, can they be cured by restoring the balance of substances and secretions in
that mysterious organ? And, once equilibrium is reinstated is the illness
"gone" or is it still lurking there, "under wraps", waiting to erupt? Are
psychiatric problems inherited, rooted in faulty genes (though amplified by
environmental factors) or brought on by abusive or wrong
nurturance?
These questions are the
domain of the "medical" school of mental health.
Others cling to the spiritual view of the human psyche. They
believe that mental ailments amount to the metaphysical discomposure of an
unknown medium the soul. Theirs is a holistic approach, taking in the patient
in his or her entirety, as well as his milieu.
The members of the functional school regard mental health
disorders as perturbations in the proper, statistically "normal", behaviours and
manifestations of "healthy" individuals, or as dysfunctions. The "sick"
individual ill at ease with himself (ego-dystonic) or making others unhappy
(deviant) is "mended" when rendered functional again by the prevailing
standards of his social and cultural frame of reference.
In a way, the three schools are akin to the trio of blind men who
render disparate descriptions of the very same elephant. Still, they share not
only their subject matter but, to a counter intuitively large degree, a faulty
methodology.
As the renowned anti-psychiatrist, Thomas Szasz, of the State
University of New York, notes in his article "The Lying Truths of
Psychiatry", mental health scholars, regardless of academic
predilection, infer the etiology of mental disorders from the success or failure
of treatment modalities.
This form of "reverse engineering" of scientific models is not
unknown in other fields of science, nor is it unacceptable if the experiments
meet the criteria of the scientific method. The theory must be all-inclusive
(anamnetic), consistent, falsifiable, logically compatible, monovalent, and
parsimonious. Psychological "theories" even the "medical" ones (the role of
serotonin and dopamine in mood disorders, for instance) are usually none of
these things.
The outcome is a bewildering array of
ever-shifting mental health "diagnoses" expressly centred around Western
civilisation and its standards (example: the ethical objection to suicide).
Neurosis, a historically fundamental "condition" vanished after 1980.
Homosexuality, according to the American Psychiatric Association, was a
pathology prior to 1973. Seven years later, narcissism was declared a
"personality disorder", almost seven decades after it was first described by
Freud.
II. Personality
Disorders
Indeed, personality disorders are an excellent example of the
kaleidoscopic landscape of "objective" psychiatry.
The classification of Axis II personality disorders deeply
ingrained, maladaptive, lifelong behavior patterns in the Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual, fourth edition, text revision [American Psychiatric
Association. DSM-IV-TR, Washington, 2000] or the DSM-IV-TR for short
has come under sustained and serious criticism from its inception in
1952, in the first edition of the DSM.
The DSM IV-TR adopts a categorical approach, postulating that
personality disorders are "qualitatively distinct clinical
syndromes" (p. 689). This is widely doubted. Even the distinction
made between "normal" and "disordered" personalities is increasingly being
rejected. The "diagnostic thresholds" between normal and abnormal are either
absent or weakly supported.
The polythetic form of the DSM's Diagnostic Criteria only a
subset of the criteria is adequate grounds for a diagnosis generates
unacceptable diagnostic heterogeneity. In other words, people diagnosed with the
same personality disorder may share only one criterion or none.
The DSM fails to clarify the exact relationship between Axis II and Axis I
disorders and the way chronic childhood and developmental problems interact with
personality disorders.
The differential diagnoses are vague and the personality
disorders are insufficiently demarcated. The result is excessive co-morbidity
(multiple Axis II diagnoses).
The DSM contains little discussion of what distinguishes normal
character (personality), personality traits, or personality style (Millon)
from personality disorders.
A dearth of documented clinical experience regarding both the
disorders themselves and the utility of various treatment modalities.
Numerous personality disorders are "not otherwise specified" a catchall,
basket "category".
Cultural bias is evident in certain disorders (such as the
Antisocial and the Schizotypal).
The emergence of dimensional alternatives to the categorical approach is
acknowledged in the DSM-IV-TR itself:
An alternative to the categorical approach is the
dimensional perspective that Personality Disorders represent maladaptive
variants of personality traits that merge imperceptibly into normality and into
one another (p.689)
The following issues long neglected in the DSM are likely to
be tackled in future editions as well as in current research. But their omission
from official discourse hitherto is both startling and telling:
-
The longitudinal course of the disorder(s) and their temporal
stability from early childhood onwards;
-
The genetic and biological underpinnings of personality
disorder(s);
-
The development of personality psychopathology during childhood
and its emergence in adolescence;
-
The interactions between physical health and disease and
personality disorders;
-
The effectiveness of various treatments talk therapies as well
as psychopharmacology.
III. The Biochemistry and Genetics of
Mental Health
Certain mental health afflictions are either correlated with a
statistically abnormal biochemical activity in the brain or are ameliorated
with medication. Yet the two facts are not ineludibly facets of
the same underlying phenomenon. In other words, that a given
medicine reduces or abolishes certain symptoms does not necessarily mean they
were caused by the processes or substances affected by the drug
administered. Causation is only one of many possible connections and chains of
events.
To designate a pattern of behaviour as a mental health disorder is
a value judgment, or at best a statistical observation. Such designation is
effected regardless of the facts of brain science. Moreover, correlation is not
causation. Deviant brain or body biochemistry (once called "polluted animal
spirits") do exist but are they truly the roots of mental perversion? Nor is
it clear which triggers what: do the aberrant neurochemistry or biochemistry
cause mental illness or the other way around?
That psychoactive medication alters behaviour and mood is
indisputable. So do illicit and legal drugs, certain foods, and all
interpersonal interactions. That the changes brought about by prescription are
desirable is debatable and involves tautological thinking. If a certain
pattern of behaviour is described as (socially) "dysfunctional" or
(psychologically) "sick" clearly, every change would be welcomed as "healing"
and every agent of transformation would be called a "cure".
The same applies to the alleged heredity of mental illness. Single
genes or gene complexes are frequently "associated" with mental health
diagnoses, personality traits, or behaviour patterns. But too little is known to
establish irrefutable sequences of causes-and-effects. Even less is proven about
the interaction of nature and nurture, genotype and phenotype, the plasticity of
the brain and the psychological impact of trauma, abuse, upbringing, role
models, peers, and other environmental elements.
Nor is the distinction between psychotropic substances and talk
therapy that clear-cut. Words and the interaction with the therapist also affect
the brain, its processes and chemistry - albeit more slowly and, perhaps, more
profoundly and irreversibly. Medicines as David Kaiser reminds us in
"Against Biologic Psychiatry" (Psychiatric Times, Volume XIII,
Issue 12, December 1996) treat symptoms, not the underlying processes that
yield them.
IV. The Variance of Mental
Disease
If mental illnesses are bodily and empirical, they should be
invariant both temporally and spatially, across cultures and societies. This, to
some degree, is, indeed, the case. Psychological diseases are not context
dependent but the pathologizing of certain behaviours is. Suicide, substance
abuse, narcissism, eating disorders, antisocial ways, schizotypal symptoms,
depression, even psychosis are considered sick by some cultures and utterly
normative or advantageous in others.
This was to be expected. The human mind and its dysfunctions are
alike around the world. But values differ from time to time and from one place
to another. Hence, disagreements about the propriety and desirability of human
actions and inaction are bound to arise in a symptom-based diagnostic
system.
As long as the pseudo-medical definitions of mental
health disorders continue to rely exclusively on signs and symptoms i.e.,
mostly on observed or reported behaviours they remain vulnerable to such
discord and devoid of much-sought universality and rigor.
V. Mental Disorders and the Social
Order
The mentally sick receive the same treatment as carriers of AIDS
or SARS or the Ebola virus or smallpox. They are sometimes quarantined against
their will and coerced into involuntary treatment by medication, psychosurgery,
or electroconvulsive therapy. This is done in the name of the greater good,
largely as a preventive policy.
Conspiracy theories notwithstanding, it is impossible to ignore
the enormous interests vested in psychiatry and psychopharmacology. The
multibillion dollar industries involving drug companies, hospitals, managed
healthcare, private clinics, academic departments, and law enforcement agencies
rely, for their continued and exponential growth, on the propagation of the
concept of "mental illness" and its corollaries: treatment and research.
VI. Mental Ailment as a Useful
Metaphor
Abstract concepts form the core of all branches of human
knowledge. No one has ever seen a quark, or untangled a chemical bond, or surfed
an electromagnetic wave, or visited the unconscious. These are useful metaphors,
theoretical entities with explanatory or descriptive power.
"Mental health disorders" are no different. They are shorthand for
capturing the unsettling quiddity of "the Other". Useful as taxonomies, they are
also tools of social coercion and conformity, as Michel Foucault and Louis Althusser observed.
Relegating both the dangerous and the idiosyncratic to the collective fringes is
a vital technique of social engineering.
The aim is progress through social cohesion and the regulation of
innovation and creative destruction. Psychiatry, therefore, is reifies society's
preference of evolution to revolution, or, worse still, to mayhem. As is often
the case with human endeavour, it is a noble cause, unscrupulously and
dogmatically pursued.
VII. The Insanity Defense
"It
is an ill thing to knock against a deaf-mute, an imbecile, or a minor. He that
wounds them is culpable, but if they wound him they are not culpable." (Mishna,
Babylonian Talmud)
If mental illness is culture-dependent and mostly serves as an
organizing social principle - what should we make of the insanity defense (NGRI-
Not Guilty by Reason of Insanity)?
A person is held not responsible for his criminal actions if s/he
cannot tell right from wrong ("lacks substantial capacity
either to appreciate the criminality (wrongfulness) of his conduct" - diminished
capacity), did not intend to act the way he did (absent "mens rea")
and/or could not control his behavior ("irresistible impulse"). These
handicaps are often associated with "mental disease or defect" or "mental
retardation".
Mental health professionals prefer to talk about an impairment of
a "person's perception
or understanding of reality". They hold a "guilty but mentally ill" verdict
to be contradiction in terms. All "mentally-ill" people operate within a
(usually coherent) worldview, with consistent internal logic, and rules of right
and wrong (ethics). Yet, these rarely conform to the way most people perceive
the world. The mentally-ill, therefore, cannot be guilty because s/he has a
tenuous grasp on reality.
Yet, experience teaches us that a criminal maybe mentally ill even
as s/he maintains a perfect reality test and thus is held criminally responsible
(Jeffrey Dahmer comes to mind). The "perception and understanding of reality",
in other words, can and does co-exist even with the severest forms of mental
illness.
This makes it even more difficult to comprehend what is meant by
"mental disease". If some mentally ill maintain a grasp on reality, know right
from wrong, can anticipate the outcomes of their actions, are not subject to
irresistible impulses (the official position of the American Psychiatric
Association) - in what way do they differ from us, "normal" folks?
This is why the insanity defense often sits ill with mental health
pathologies deemed socially "acceptable" and "normal" - such as religion
or love.
Consider the following case:
A mother bashes the skulls of her three sons. Two of them die. She
claims to have acted on instructions she had received from God. She is found not
guilty by reason of insanity. The jury determined that she "did
not know right from wrong during the killings."
But why exactly was she judged insane?
Her belief in the existence of God - a being with inordinate
and inhuman attributes - may be irrational.
But it does not constitute insanity in the strictest sense because
it conforms to social and cultural creeds and codes of conduct in her milieu.
Billions of people faithfully subscribe to the same ideas, adhere to the same
transcendental rules, observe the same mystical rituals, and claim to go through
the same experiences. This shared psychosis is so widespread that it can no
longer be deemed pathological, statistically speaking.
She claimed that God has spoken to her.
As do numerous other people. Behavior that is considered psychotic
(paranoid-schizophrenic) in other contexts is lauded and admired in religious
circles. Hearing voices and seeing visions - auditory and visual delusions - are
considered rank manifestations of righteousness and sanctity.
Perhaps it was the content of her hallucinations that proved her
insane?
She claimed that God had instructed her to kill her boys.
Surely, God would not ordain such evil?
Alas, the Old and New Testaments both contain examples of God's
appetite for human sacrifice. Abraham was ordered by God to sacrifice Isaac, his
beloved son (though this savage command was rescinded at the last moment).
Jesus, the son of God himself, was crucified to atone for the sins of humanity.
A divine injunction to slay one's offspring would sit well with
the Holy Scriptures and the Apocrypha as well as with millennia-old
Judeo-Christian traditions of martyrdom and sacrifice.
Her actions were wrong and incommensurate with both human
and divine (or natural) laws.
Yes, but they were perfectly in accord with a literal
interpretation of certain divinely-inspired texts, millennial scriptures,
apocalyptic thought systems, and fundamentalist religious ideologies (such as
the ones espousing the imminence of "rupture"). Unless one declares these
doctrines and writings insane, her actions are not.
we are forced to the conclusion that the murderous mother is
perfectly sane. Her frame of reference is different to ours. Hence, her
definitions of right and wrong are idiosyncratic. To her, killing her babies was
the right thing to do and in conformity with valued teachings and her own
epiphany. Her grasp of reality - the immediate and later consequences of her
actions - was never impaired.
It would seem that sanity and insanity are relative terms,
dependent on frames of cultural and social reference, and statistically defined.
There isn't - and, in principle, can never emerge - an "objective", medical,
scientific test to determine mental health or disease unequivocally.
VIII. Adaptation and Insanity - (correspondence with Paul
Shirley, MSW)
"Normal" people adapt to their environment - both human and natural.
"Abnormal" ones try to adapt their environment - both human and natural - to
their idiosyncratic needs/profile.
If they succeed, their environment, both human (society) and natural is
pathologized. Author Bio Sam Vaknin ( http://samvak.tripod.com ) is the
author of Malignant Self Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How
the West Lost the East. He served as a columnist for Central Europe Review,
PopMatters, and eBookWeb , a United Press International (UPI) Senior Business
Correspondent, and the editor of mental health and Central East Europe
categories in The Open Directory Bellaonline, and Suite101. |