https://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.co...of-psychiatry/
a couple of quotes:
andPsychiatric practice does seem to be based on implicit moral assumptions in addition to explicit empirical considerations, and efforts to treat mental illness can be society’s way of controlling what it views as immoral (or otherwise undesirable) behavior .... there’s no guarantee that even today psychiatry is free of similarly dubious judgments. ... Foucault said that the point of his social critiques was “not that everything is bad but that everything is dangerous.”
this resonates for me. It's probably what underlies my frequent challenges to posts that purport to apply psychological analysis to current issues.psychiatric practice makes essential use of moral (and other evaluative) judgments. Why is this dangerous? Because, first of all, psychiatrists as such have no special knowledge about how people should live. They can, from their clinical experience, give us crucial information about the likely psychological consequences of living in various ways (for sexual pleasure, for one’s children, for a political cause). But they have no special insight into what sorts of consequences make for a good human life. It is, therefore, dangerous to make them privileged judges of what syndromes should be labeled “mental illnesses.”



Everyone, without exception, needs some sort of "psychotherapy".
, a trip to the beach, fishing, dance
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