Guest guest Posted January 30, 2001 Report Share Posted January 30, 2001 In a message dated 1/27/01 4:55:35 PM Pacific Standard Time, dmarcoot@... writes: << you mean she killed 2 people within 3 months of rejoining aa, being told she was powerless, and that if she didnt abstain she would a fail? guess absitence kills? or is it just aa's way of teaching it? maybe is she was offered some practical tools for living life sober, rather than relgious conversion, something other than prayer, turning her will over to her " Living Creator " , calling a sponsor or reading the blathering of bill wilson, she may have abstained successfully. we will never know. ethier way she is ultimatly repsonsiable for her choice to join AA, the drinking and the deaths she caused did while practicing aa mind fuck program. nor does her mishap have any releavnce for those who moderate and live productive lies, becuase she was trying to abstain! and she was taught if she drank she would lose control, and guess what, she did what she was taught to do. > > > What about whoopie cushions? Aren't they also dangerous? > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2001 Report Share Posted January 30, 2001 In a message dated 1/27/01 4:55:35 PM Pacific Standard Time, dmarcoot@... writes: << you mean she killed 2 people within 3 months of rejoining aa, being told she was powerless, and that if she didnt abstain she would a fail? guess absitence kills? or is it just aa's way of teaching it? maybe is she was offered some practical tools for living life sober, rather than relgious conversion, something other than prayer, turning her will over to her " Living Creator " , calling a sponsor or reading the blathering of bill wilson, she may have abstained successfully. we will never know. ethier way she is ultimatly repsonsiable for her choice to join AA, the drinking and the deaths she caused did while practicing aa mind fuck program. nor does her mishap have any releavnce for those who moderate and live productive lies, becuase she was trying to abstain! and she was taught if she drank she would lose control, and guess what, she did what she was taught to do. > > > What about whoopie cushions? Aren't they also dangerous? > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2001 Report Share Posted January 30, 2001 > > > alcohol may kill brain cells, but unless you > > can demonstrate there is signiifcant reduction in quality of life > for > > people, one which they arent willing to accept, your argument > > comes across as arrogant and self righteous, rather than based > > on scincere concern for anyones well being. > > Alcohol disorients man's survival tool: the conscious mind. With > a disoriented conscious mind, man is prone to make decisions and take > actions that can cause long-range suffering to oneself and others > around him. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2001 Report Share Posted January 30, 2001 > > > alcohol may kill brain cells, but unless you > > can demonstrate there is signiifcant reduction in quality of life > for > > people, one which they arent willing to accept, your argument > > comes across as arrogant and self righteous, rather than based > > on scincere concern for anyones well being. > > Alcohol disorients man's survival tool: the conscious mind. With > a disoriented conscious mind, man is prone to make decisions and take > actions that can cause long-range suffering to oneself and others > around him. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2001 Report Share Posted January 30, 2001 > > > alcohol may kill brain cells, but unless you > > can demonstrate there is signiifcant reduction in quality of life > for > > people, one which they arent willing to accept, your argument > > comes across as arrogant and self righteous, rather than based > > on scincere concern for anyones well being. > > Alcohol disorients man's survival tool: the conscious mind. With > a disoriented conscious mind, man is prone to make decisions and take > actions that can cause long-range suffering to oneself and others > around him. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2001 Report Share Posted January 30, 2001 > > > > what do you think of anti-depressant drugs? psychiatry? how > > > does that fit into your views? > > > > Anti-depressant drugs are valuable when prescribed by doctors to > > treat specific medical conditions. A drug's action or " value " is not dependent on who administers or prescribes it. > At least there is one prejudice you dont have, but you are still > coming out with a claim of universal toxicity of alcohol against all > the epidemiology suggesting otherwise. Even without using this example, Hunter's argument makes no sense. He ignores cost/benefit to the individual. The value, or net benefit, of moderate, hard, or no drinking varies from person to person. It's also a subjective value that cannot be measured. Most things we do are potentially harmful, or have some risk associated with them, and they are not essential for the survival of the organism. Most good things can become bad or deadly when taken to excess. As you point out, there is evidence that a glass of Cabernet taken with dinner may be healthy for many people. >In the last 50 years or so > Psychiatry is scientific. Coming from someone who is so eloquent in debunking Homeopathic quakery, I am disapointed. Psychiatry is a classic psuedoscience best understood as an institution of social control. Jim Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2001 Report Share Posted January 30, 2001 > > > > what do you think of anti-depressant drugs? psychiatry? how > > > does that fit into your views? > > > > Anti-depressant drugs are valuable when prescribed by doctors to > > treat specific medical conditions. A drug's action or " value " is not dependent on who administers or prescribes it. > At least there is one prejudice you dont have, but you are still > coming out with a claim of universal toxicity of alcohol against all > the epidemiology suggesting otherwise. Even without using this example, Hunter's argument makes no sense. He ignores cost/benefit to the individual. The value, or net benefit, of moderate, hard, or no drinking varies from person to person. It's also a subjective value that cannot be measured. Most things we do are potentially harmful, or have some risk associated with them, and they are not essential for the survival of the organism. Most good things can become bad or deadly when taken to excess. As you point out, there is evidence that a glass of Cabernet taken with dinner may be healthy for many people. >In the last 50 years or so > Psychiatry is scientific. Coming from someone who is so eloquent in debunking Homeopathic quakery, I am disapointed. Psychiatry is a classic psuedoscience best understood as an institution of social control. Jim Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2001 Report Share Posted January 30, 2001 > aerobic, highs, well thats exercise, you > can injury yourself exercising. most people who exercise > will, and do injury themselves many times in pursuit of their > goals. i should know. sex can spread disease. with all of > these things, there are responsibilities which if take for granted > can cause harm. A person can get injured during aerobic exercise. A person can acquire a sexually transmitted disease during sex. And a person can get hit by a car while walking. These are potential dangers that exist in the above activities. But you are omitting the fact that these are all non-volitional dangers. A person does not volitionally twist his ankle while running, nor does he volitionally step in front of a car while walking. But drinking alcohol or taking drugs is a volitional process that directly impairs thought and harms the organism. Thus, one has direct control over hurting oneself through the use of alcohol or drugs. But one does not have direct control over accidents that might occur during daily life. Hunter http://www.localgroup.net Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2001 Report Share Posted January 30, 2001 > aerobic, highs, well thats exercise, you > can injury yourself exercising. most people who exercise > will, and do injury themselves many times in pursuit of their > goals. i should know. sex can spread disease. with all of > these things, there are responsibilities which if take for granted > can cause harm. A person can get injured during aerobic exercise. A person can acquire a sexually transmitted disease during sex. And a person can get hit by a car while walking. These are potential dangers that exist in the above activities. But you are omitting the fact that these are all non-volitional dangers. A person does not volitionally twist his ankle while running, nor does he volitionally step in front of a car while walking. But drinking alcohol or taking drugs is a volitional process that directly impairs thought and harms the organism. Thus, one has direct control over hurting oneself through the use of alcohol or drugs. But one does not have direct control over accidents that might occur during daily life. Hunter http://www.localgroup.net Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2001 Report Share Posted January 30, 2001 > aerobic, highs, well thats exercise, you > can injury yourself exercising. most people who exercise > will, and do injury themselves many times in pursuit of their > goals. i should know. sex can spread disease. with all of > these things, there are responsibilities which if take for granted > can cause harm. A person can get injured during aerobic exercise. A person can acquire a sexually transmitted disease during sex. And a person can get hit by a car while walking. These are potential dangers that exist in the above activities. But you are omitting the fact that these are all non-volitional dangers. A person does not volitionally twist his ankle while running, nor does he volitionally step in front of a car while walking. But drinking alcohol or taking drugs is a volitional process that directly impairs thought and harms the organism. Thus, one has direct control over hurting oneself through the use of alcohol or drugs. But one does not have direct control over accidents that might occur during daily life. Hunter http://www.localgroup.net Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 30, 2001 Report Share Posted January 30, 2001 > You keep making the same unsubstantiated > pronouncements… Did I say alcohol use damages the human organism without providing specific evidence? Sorry, my mistake. Here is the evidence to back up my claim that alcohol is harmful to human beings: 1. About 100,000 deaths a year can be wholly or partially attributed to drinking alcohol 2. Alcoholism reduces life expectancy by 10 to 12 years 3. People who drink regularly have a higher rate of deaths from injury, violence, and some cancers than non-drinkers 4. Alcohol plays a major role in more than half of all automobile fatalities 5. Alcohol also increases the risk of accidental injuries from many other causes 6. Among emergency room patients who were admitted for injuries, 47% tested positive for alcohol and 35% were intoxicated 7. Alcoholism is the primary diagnosis in one quarter of all people who commit suicide 8. Alcohol is implicated in 67% of all murders 9. 41% of children of alcoholics have serious coping problems that may be life long 10. Alcohol can affect the body in so many ways that researchers are having a hard time determining exactly what the consequences are of drinking 11. The more alcohol someone drank, the greater the increase in blood pressure 12. Chronic alcohol abuse can also damage the heart muscle, which leads to heart failure 13. Moderate to heaving drinking was a greater risk factor for coronary artery disease than smoking 14. Other studies found light drinking was protective. More research is needed to confirm or refute this new study. In any case, moderate drinking does not appear to offer any heart benefits for people who are at low risk for heart disease to begin with. 15. Daily drinking increases the risk for lung, esophageal, gastric, pancreatic, colorectal, urinary tract, liver, and brain cancers, lymphoma and leukemia 16. About 75% of cancers of the esophagus and 50% of cancers of the mouth, throat, and larynx are attributed to alcoholism 17. Smoking combined with drinking enhances risks for most of these cancers dramatically 18. In the liver, alcohol converts to an even more toxic substance, acetaldehyde, which can cause substantial damage 19. Alcohol can also contribute to serious infections of the pancreas and to ulcers in people taking the painkillers known as nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs 20. Alcohol suppresses the immune system 21. One study on laboratory animals suggests that alcohol specifically damages the bacteria-fighting capability of lung cells 22. Alcohol has widespread effects on the brain 23. Habitual use of alcohol eventually produces depression and confusion 24. In chronic cases, gray matter is destroyed, possibly leading to psychosis and mental disturbances 25. Alcohol can also cause milder neurologic problems, including insomnia and headache 26. Alcohol may increase the risk for hemorrhagic stroke 27. Alcohol-dependent women seem to face an increased risk for damage to muscles, including muscles of the heart, from the toxic effects of alcohol 28. Alcoholism increases levels of the female hormone estrogen and reduces levels of the male hormone testosterone, factors that contribute to impotence in men 29. Alcohol can cause hypoglycemia, a drop in blood sugar, which is especially dangerous for people with diabetes who are taking insulin 30. In addition to replacing food, alcohol may also interfere with absorption of proteins, vitamins, and other nutrients 31. Even moderate amounts of alcohol may have damaging effects on the developing fetus, including low birth weight and an increased risk for miscarriage 32. As people age, it takes fewer drinks to become intoxicated, and organs can be damaged by smaller amounts of alcohol than in younger people Reference: WebMD Corporation http://webmd.lycos.com/content/dmk/dmk_article_5461917 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2001 Report Share Posted January 31, 2001 This is a funny one. Someone just accuses a guy of being in a cult (maybe he is, but maybe she is, I don't know) because they can't agree. I think its hilarious how the paragraph at the bottom by Spock, I mean Hunter, or the Bicentennial Man, whoever - just the way it is so proper is funny. But its a tough argument really. One side says alcohol causes damage and disorientation - that is true. The other side says it can be good for you and may not hurt you - that is true. See both sides are correct, so what can we do? I think the problem is control (the reason behind cults, as I discovered yesterday). See Hunter is trying to tell others what to do and it isn't working. It's amazing it's not working, there are some smart and experienced people here :-) Re: I've mastered moderate alcohol use/vs.helplessness > > > > > > alcohol may kill brain cells, but unless you > > > can demonstrate there is signiifcant reduction in quality of life > > for > > > people, one which they arent willing to accept, your argument > > > comes across as arrogant and self righteous, rather than based > > > on scincere concern for anyones well being. > > > > Alcohol disorients man's survival tool: the conscious mind. With > > a disoriented conscious mind, man is prone to make decisions and take > > actions that can cause long-range suffering to oneself and others > > around him. > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2001 Report Share Posted January 31, 2001 This is a funny one. Someone just accuses a guy of being in a cult (maybe he is, but maybe she is, I don't know) because they can't agree. I think its hilarious how the paragraph at the bottom by Spock, I mean Hunter, or the Bicentennial Man, whoever - just the way it is so proper is funny. But its a tough argument really. One side says alcohol causes damage and disorientation - that is true. The other side says it can be good for you and may not hurt you - that is true. See both sides are correct, so what can we do? I think the problem is control (the reason behind cults, as I discovered yesterday). See Hunter is trying to tell others what to do and it isn't working. It's amazing it's not working, there are some smart and experienced people here :-) Re: I've mastered moderate alcohol use/vs.helplessness > > > > > > alcohol may kill brain cells, but unless you > > > can demonstrate there is signiifcant reduction in quality of life > > for > > > people, one which they arent willing to accept, your argument > > > comes across as arrogant and self righteous, rather than based > > > on scincere concern for anyones well being. > > > > Alcohol disorients man's survival tool: the conscious mind. With > > a disoriented conscious mind, man is prone to make decisions and take > > actions that can cause long-range suffering to oneself and others > > around him. > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2001 Report Share Posted January 31, 2001 This is a funny one. Someone just accuses a guy of being in a cult (maybe he is, but maybe she is, I don't know) because they can't agree. I think its hilarious how the paragraph at the bottom by Spock, I mean Hunter, or the Bicentennial Man, whoever - just the way it is so proper is funny. But its a tough argument really. One side says alcohol causes damage and disorientation - that is true. The other side says it can be good for you and may not hurt you - that is true. See both sides are correct, so what can we do? I think the problem is control (the reason behind cults, as I discovered yesterday). See Hunter is trying to tell others what to do and it isn't working. It's amazing it's not working, there are some smart and experienced people here :-) Re: I've mastered moderate alcohol use/vs.helplessness > > > > > > alcohol may kill brain cells, but unless you > > > can demonstrate there is signiifcant reduction in quality of life > > for > > > people, one which they arent willing to accept, your argument > > > comes across as arrogant and self righteous, rather than based > > > on scincere concern for anyones well being. > > > > Alcohol disorients man's survival tool: the conscious mind. With > > a disoriented conscious mind, man is prone to make decisions and take > > actions that can cause long-range suffering to oneself and others > > around him. > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2001 Report Share Posted January 31, 2001 Could we get this one to stop posting as egroups? It looks like an egroups notice when it comes in my mailbox. > Re: I've mastered moderate alcohol >use/vs.helplessness Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2001 Report Share Posted January 31, 2001 Could we get this one to stop posting as egroups? It looks like an egroups notice when it comes in my mailbox. > Re: I've mastered moderate alcohol >use/vs.helplessness Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 2001 Report Share Posted January 31, 2001 > Coming from someone who is so eloquent in debunking Homeopathic > quakery, I am disapointed. Psychiatry is a classic psuedoscience >best understood as an institution of social control. You gotta stop reading that Szasz Jim! I think we need to define our terms here carfully. Let me agree for purpose of argument that psychiatry is merely an institution of social control. Even if true, I would say that psychiatry *scientifically* pursues that objective. One does not judge a discipline a pseudoscience on the legitimacy of its objectives (apart from commitment to truth-seeking, science is value free) but on its modus operandi. Psychiatry generally uses the same protocols for development of its treatment that general medicine does, which I believe are as scientific as possible oprating within ethical constraints. Whatever or not Psychiatry may be up to, and whether or not it is ethical or not, I believe it is pursuing its objectives scientifically. Ironically, for those who see Psychiatry as Nazi-Lite, I would say that if it were indeed only a pseudoscience and employed homeopathic 'remedies' say then they would have far less cause to find it threatening. P. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2001 Report Share Posted February 1, 2001 Pete, Science relies on measurable, objective evidence. To report that lab rat #1 rang the food bell three times after recieving the shock may be scientific; to report that the rat was evasive and paranoid is psychiatry. The unscientific criteria used to diagnose the fictitious diseases that they treat, if applied logically and uniformly, which they are not, would have all of us being mentally ill, and therefore without any human rights or dignity save what is allowed by these priests and their monopoly on " reality. " Psychiatry borrows the window-dressing of the medical model- much like 12step hospitals and chiropracters, who, not surprisingly, also treat fictitious diseases with pseudoscientific methods. Dozens--no, hundreds--of new " diseases " have been discovered by these quacks in recent years. Furthermore, the diagnosis is nothing but a subjective opinion, the opinion of a twentieth century witch-doctor who can deprive one of all civil liberties (including due process) and subject the witch (patient) to a multitude of experimental tortures by coercion. Of course, none of this is to say that there is not legitimate scientific research in the fields of neurology and psychology, or that human beings are not subject to unpleasant emotions and thought proceses. Sorry, voting Republican may be an anti-social behavior that indicates delusion, but it's not a disease, nor is it a symptom of one. ;-) Jim > You gotta stop reading that Szasz Jim! I think we need to define our > terms here carfully. Let me agree for purpose of argument that > psychiatry is merely an institution of social control. Even if true, > I would say that psychiatry *scientifically* pursues that objective. > One does not judge a discipline a pseudoscience on the legitimacy of > its objectives (apart from commitment to truth-seeking, science is > value free) but on its modus operandi. Psychiatry generally uses the > same protocols for development of its treatment that general medicine > does, which I believe are as scientific as possible oprating within > ethical constraints. Whatever or not Psychiatry may be up to, and > whether or not it is ethical or not, I believe it is pursuing its > objectives scientifically. Ironically, for those who see Psychiatry > as Nazi-Lite, I would say that if it were indeed only a pseudoscience > and employed homeopathic 'remedies' say then they would have far less > cause to find it threatening. > > P. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2001 Report Share Posted February 1, 2001 Pete, Science relies on measurable, objective evidence. To report that lab rat #1 rang the food bell three times after recieving the shock may be scientific; to report that the rat was evasive and paranoid is psychiatry. The unscientific criteria used to diagnose the fictitious diseases that they treat, if applied logically and uniformly, which they are not, would have all of us being mentally ill, and therefore without any human rights or dignity save what is allowed by these priests and their monopoly on " reality. " Psychiatry borrows the window-dressing of the medical model- much like 12step hospitals and chiropracters, who, not surprisingly, also treat fictitious diseases with pseudoscientific methods. Dozens--no, hundreds--of new " diseases " have been discovered by these quacks in recent years. Furthermore, the diagnosis is nothing but a subjective opinion, the opinion of a twentieth century witch-doctor who can deprive one of all civil liberties (including due process) and subject the witch (patient) to a multitude of experimental tortures by coercion. Of course, none of this is to say that there is not legitimate scientific research in the fields of neurology and psychology, or that human beings are not subject to unpleasant emotions and thought proceses. Sorry, voting Republican may be an anti-social behavior that indicates delusion, but it's not a disease, nor is it a symptom of one. ;-) Jim > You gotta stop reading that Szasz Jim! I think we need to define our > terms here carfully. Let me agree for purpose of argument that > psychiatry is merely an institution of social control. Even if true, > I would say that psychiatry *scientifically* pursues that objective. > One does not judge a discipline a pseudoscience on the legitimacy of > its objectives (apart from commitment to truth-seeking, science is > value free) but on its modus operandi. Psychiatry generally uses the > same protocols for development of its treatment that general medicine > does, which I believe are as scientific as possible oprating within > ethical constraints. Whatever or not Psychiatry may be up to, and > whether or not it is ethical or not, I believe it is pursuing its > objectives scientifically. Ironically, for those who see Psychiatry > as Nazi-Lite, I would say that if it were indeed only a pseudoscience > and employed homeopathic 'remedies' say then they would have far less > cause to find it threatening. > > P. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2001 Report Share Posted February 1, 2001 In a message dated 1/26/01 12:31:30 AM Pacific Standard Time, kenr1@... writes: << What ever happened to " the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness " ? I have no problem with anyone choosing not to smoke cigarettes, pot or opiates, drink coffee or beer, snort cocaine or take hallucinogens. As a matter of fact, most people when they decide to do so are obviously making the right decision for themselves. I never cease to be appalled by the arrogance of some people who know what is good for everybody else, what everyone else needs and everyone else doesn't need. Ken Ragge P.S. What about red meat? > Hunter > http://www.localgroup.net >> This is the interesting aspect of belief systems that escaped me until recently--that the believer MUST pass on the belief to others--a self-reinforcing loop? Piper. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2001 Report Share Posted February 1, 2001 In a message dated 1/26/01 12:31:30 AM Pacific Standard Time, kenr1@... writes: << What ever happened to " the right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness " ? I have no problem with anyone choosing not to smoke cigarettes, pot or opiates, drink coffee or beer, snort cocaine or take hallucinogens. As a matter of fact, most people when they decide to do so are obviously making the right decision for themselves. I never cease to be appalled by the arrogance of some people who know what is good for everybody else, what everyone else needs and everyone else doesn't need. Ken Ragge P.S. What about red meat? > Hunter > http://www.localgroup.net >> This is the interesting aspect of belief systems that escaped me until recently--that the believer MUST pass on the belief to others--a self-reinforcing loop? Piper. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2001 Report Share Posted February 1, 2001 In a message dated 2/1/01 2:05:41 PM Pacific Standard Time, wn115@... writes: << Sorry, voting Republican may be an anti-social behavior that indicates delusion, but it's not a disease, nor is it a symptom of one. ;-) Jim >> Are you sure? LOL. Many of the personality disorders listed in the DSM-IV-Revised, are actually based upon psychoanalytic concepts. You can't get much more primitive than that. Many of these AXIS-II categories, I believe are politically motivated, especially anti-social personality disorder. We won't even go into borderline personality disorder or narccisism. (<holds head). There is much to look forward to though as Jim says in cognitive and neuropsych endeavors, so not to despair totally. I personally, am grateful to pharmacology advancements--so the diagnoses aren't so hot--- primitive, infantile fields have to grow step by step. I just wish the psychodynamics hadn't regressed everything a decade or so. Piper. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2001 Report Share Posted February 1, 2001 In a message dated 2/1/01 2:05:41 PM Pacific Standard Time, wn115@... writes: << Sorry, voting Republican may be an anti-social behavior that indicates delusion, but it's not a disease, nor is it a symptom of one. ;-) Jim >> Are you sure? LOL. Many of the personality disorders listed in the DSM-IV-Revised, are actually based upon psychoanalytic concepts. You can't get much more primitive than that. Many of these AXIS-II categories, I believe are politically motivated, especially anti-social personality disorder. We won't even go into borderline personality disorder or narccisism. (<holds head). There is much to look forward to though as Jim says in cognitive and neuropsych endeavors, so not to despair totally. I personally, am grateful to pharmacology advancements--so the diagnoses aren't so hot--- primitive, infantile fields have to grow step by step. I just wish the psychodynamics hadn't regressed everything a decade or so. Piper. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 1, 2001 Report Share Posted February 1, 2001 In a message dated 2/1/01 2:05:41 PM Pacific Standard Time, wn115@... writes: << Sorry, voting Republican may be an anti-social behavior that indicates delusion, but it's not a disease, nor is it a symptom of one. ;-) Jim >> Are you sure? LOL. Many of the personality disorders listed in the DSM-IV-Revised, are actually based upon psychoanalytic concepts. You can't get much more primitive than that. Many of these AXIS-II categories, I believe are politically motivated, especially anti-social personality disorder. We won't even go into borderline personality disorder or narccisism. (<holds head). There is much to look forward to though as Jim says in cognitive and neuropsych endeavors, so not to despair totally. I personally, am grateful to pharmacology advancements--so the diagnoses aren't so hot--- primitive, infantile fields have to grow step by step. I just wish the psychodynamics hadn't regressed everything a decade or so. Piper. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 2, 2001 Report Share Posted February 2, 2001 Hi Jim This one could run and run, so I'll try to keep it brief. I would say that psychiatry contains a mixture of scientific and non-scientific practices. Human behavior is more complex than rats and bell pushes and hence more global, less specific terms must be used to describe it. If a patient reports that the Democrats have planted a radio in his brain ordering him to commit suicide and monitoring his thoughts for example, this will be a unique experience but with broad similarity to other things that paranoid ppl report. If after administration of an antipsychotic that patient loses all trace of that symptom and looks back acknowledging the claims were delusional this could be said to be effective treatment of the paranoia. Such treatments are not administered on an anecdotal basis but evaluated by clinical trial, and hence imo scientific. P. > > > You gotta stop reading that Szasz Jim! I think we need to define > our > > terms here carfully. Let me agree for purpose of argument that > > psychiatry is merely an institution of social control. Even if > true, > > I would say that psychiatry *scientifically* pursues that > objective. > > One does not judge a discipline a pseudoscience on the legitimacy > of > > its objectives (apart from commitment to truth-seeking, science is > > value free) but on its modus operandi. Psychiatry generally uses > the > > same protocols for development of its treatment that general > medicine > > does, which I believe are as scientific as possible oprating within > > ethical constraints. Whatever or not Psychiatry may be up to, and > > whether or not it is ethical or not, I believe it is pursuing its > > objectives scientifically. Ironically, for those who see > Psychiatry > > as Nazi-Lite, I would say that if it were indeed only a > pseudoscience > > and employed homeopathic 'remedies' say then they would have far > less > > cause to find it threatening. > > > > P. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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