Psychiatry is the medical specialty devoted to the diagnosis, prevention, and treatment of mental disorders. — Wikipedia
Organic brain syndrome, also known as organic brain disease, organic brain disorder, organic mental syndrome, or organic mental disorder, refers to any syndrome or disorder of mental function whose cause is alleged to be known as organic (physiologic) rather than purely of the mind. These names are older and nearly obsolete general terms from psychiatry, referring to many physical disorders that cause impaired mental function.[3] They are meant to exclude psychiatric disorders (mental disorders). Originally, the term was created to distinguish physical (termed "organic") causes of mental impairment from psychiatric (termed "functional") disorders, but during the era when this distinction was drawn, not enough was known about brain science (including neuroscience, cognitive science, neuropsychology, and mind-brain correlation) [...]. — Wikipedia
An organic cause to brain dysfunction is suspected when there is no indication of a clearly defined psychiatric or "inorganic" cause, such as a mood disorder. — Wikipedia
The Psychiatry Paradox: Psychiatric illnesses are inorganic (software) in nature but the therapy is organic (hardware) in nature. — TheMadFool
I remember very clearly a doctor friend of mine telling me that psychiatric illnesses were to be considered as a diagnosis only if organic brain syndrome is/was ruled out as impossible. — TheMadFool
Should we discuss brain chemistry here? :chin: — DrOlsnesLea
Not entirely true — Cheshire
Mind you, I'm not saying other, alternative methods of treating psychiatric illnesses don't exist. All I'm saying is they're usually adjuncts to treatment with a host of brain-affecting drugs. — TheMadFool
That's right. My understanding of this issue is that on the one hand, if you have something physically wrong with your brain, you need a neurologist; and if you are having emotional difficulties adapting to life, you need a therapist. If you want to run a rat through a maze or convince a population to go to war or smoke cigarettes (think Edward Bernays, who realized that these two were the same problem) you need a psychologist.
In no case do you ever need a psychiatrist, and it's unclear exactly what they do.
Paging Doctor Freud! — fishfry
Does everything have to be a psychological disorder these days? — Old Lady
In no case do you ever need a psychiatrist, and it's unclear exactly what they do.
Paging Doctor Freud! — fishfry
So they work together: the therapist determines what is needed including medical tests, — tim wood
The paradox might have implications for Mind Body Dualism and its offshoots. I'm not all that certain. — TheMadFool
Paradoxes are markers for failure — Mark Nyquist
It certainly does! I doubt any type of dualism would get far in most psychiatry programs (academic) but psychosis cases always involve mental content. So, to do it right, both the physical brain should be considered and also the physically contained mental content. There is a problem with the psychiatric profession viewing dualism as the physical and the non-physical and discounting the non-physical. A better wording of the problem would be the physical brain and the physical brains mental content.
The profession has done a poor job on the fundamentals.
I hope that's on topic. I should add that some forms of dualism should not be considered such as stand alone non-physical models (because they are bad models). — Mark Nyquist
Religion is the opium of the maases. — Karl Marx
Are you saying Buddhism or religion are a treatment for mental conditions? — Mark Nyquist
That said philosophy science and secularism are also therapies to cope with the world. — Protagoras
Most of the planet suffers from anxiety. — Protagoras
Does everything have to be a psychological disorder these days? — Wise Old Lady
Does everything have to be a psychological disorder these days?— Wise Old Lady
Most artist and talkers are neurotic as hell! — Protagoras
The perfect is the enemy of the good — Christopher Hitchens
Give them the third best to go on with; the second best comes too late, the best never comes — Robert Watson-Watt
The pathogenic model deceives the unwary philosopher into imagining that illness is something other than the judgement of the mind. — unenlightened
It's all in your mind.
They're treating the normal as abnormal and vice versa. — TheMadFool
I think it's more that they're treating normal as healthy and abnormal as sick — unenlightened
I am saying that judgement is a relation between mind and world (body, perhaps), of the species giving-a-fuck. — unenlightened
Thus alien hand syndrome, for example consists of the judgement of foreignness and revulsion towards one's hand — unenlightened
Be glad you didn't have a bad day in 1955. — Mark Nyquist
lobotomy — Mark Nyquist
Peer review and evidence based — Mark Nyquist
junk science — Mark Nyquist
I think that this is recognised by psychiatrists and most now view the treatment as a better option for people over about the age of 60, — Jack Cummins
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