What are you, as a psychologist, willing to sacrifice in order to reduce the stigma of a psychiatric diagnosis?Let's not then. What would you replace that power with. Criminals all get treated the same regardless of their mental health? The judge just guesses? We put it to a vote? What is it you think we should be doing instead of making diagnoses based on educated guesswork? — Isaac
There is a stereotype about psychologists that says that psychologists have a poor grasp of human nature. Psychologists seem to be really eager to prove this, as often as humanly possible ...Psychology could cure cancer, find the Holy Grail, and win England the World Cup and it's reputation would remain unaltered amoung the ranks of the bizarre crusade this thread is on.
If literally nothing I say is contributing to the collective thought process anyway then I might as well swear like a sailor.
When posting Cambridge University School of Psychology's definition of what psychology covers hasn't budged people an inch from their lazy, puerile assumption that psychology is "Freud 'n that init", what more could I possibly do? Lobotomy? — Isaac
Oh yes. That's why people vote for Trump.It's been about how people should be, and how they might become that way if they aren't so already.
— baker
And psychologists have certainly done a fine job on that project! — Bitter Crank
Psychologists and philosophers are equally subject to stupid stereotyping because people don't care enough to try to understand. This is also true of almost all academic disciplines and professions. — magritte
Science is what science does not what you say. — magritte
What are you, as a psychologist, willing to sacrifice in order to reduce the stigma of a psychiatric diagnosis?
Answer this, and you'll have a context for the above. — baker
There is a stereotype about psychologists that says that psychologists have a poor grasp of human nature. — baker
The negative reactions you often see to psychologists is when people resent the legal power that psychologists have. — baker
If you clicked the first link, what did you hear? — bongo fury
just sharing some lovely (perhaps inauthentic) social history.
No aspersions or barbs. — bongo fury
"... an' they catch 'im... an' they say e's mental!!" — bongo fury
Hopefully you can see the passing relevance. — bongo fury
There you go.What are you, as a psychologist, willing to sacrifice in order to reduce the stigma of a psychiatric diagnosis?
Answer this, and you'll have a context for the above.
— baker
I'm really not sure what you think I could do. I was a researcher for most of my career. Now I mainly help organisations include human factors in their long-term risk analysis. What would you have me do differently to effect a change in the stigma associated with psychiatric diagnosis? I really would be glad to help, but I haven't a clue how. — Isaac
Yes. From what I've seen, psychologists tend to try really hard to live up to that stereotype. Maybe it's a professional deformation. Maybe it's something deeper than that.There is a stereotype about psychologists that says that psychologists have a poor grasp of human nature.
— baker
Is there? And..?
We can see it with anyone who is in some important way more powerful than we are.The negative reactions you often see to psychologists is when people resent the legal power that psychologists have.
— baker
Really? Do we see the same with judges, barristers, solicitors, policemen, doctors, forensic lab technicians, and graphologists?
*sigh*It's all you. You probably say the same of all healthcare workers. You're perfect and everyone else is uncaring of perfect you. — magritte
Professionals are part of a system. If they don't do their jobs according to their system then it's up to the system to correct that. If you disagree then go complain, but don't just throw shee at everyone in site.
Mental health workers don't have the means or time to treat more than the symptoms with medications. Sad, but true.
Is it not the case that you hold a vested interest in the proliferation of the stigma associated with psychiatric diagnosis?
The stigma is, after all, what makes the psychiatric diagnosis so powerful and so relevant. Without the stigma, psychiatric diagnosis would be triflesome. — baker
From what I've seen, psychologists tend to try really hard to live up to that stereotype. Maybe it's a professional deformation. Maybe it's something deeper than that. — baker
Sometimes, you can be really narrow and petty.Did you even read what I wrote? I don't have anything whatsoever to do with the diagnosis of mental disorders. Nothing. — Isaac
*sigh*Or maybe it's because you're forming your judgment about an entire international field of research, teaching and practice based on the six people you happen to have met...?
you have worked in a field for which as a whole, diagnosing people is an important activity, both theoretically and practically. You belong to that field. What applies to that field, directly or indirectly applies to you. — baker
you were the one bringing up the issue of wanting to reduce the stigma of psychiatric diagnosis, and asked for suggestions on how to do this. — baker
my not so favorable opinion about psychologists is based primarily on knowing the laws of the land that give psychologists the power they have — baker
take the standard interpretation of the Milgram Experiment, namely, that people will go to great lengths because they obey authority. To me, this is an interpretation entirely foreign to life. — baker
interpretation of psychological experiments and psychological phenomena. — baker
Since the dawn of philosophy with Socrates, ... — Shawn
It is quite ironic that the words Psychology and Psychiatry are based on the ancient Greek word "psyche", which means "soul". Yet, Psychology nor Psychiatry do not even believe in the existence of soul (spirit)! There's only a brain for them. All material. Nothing spiritual, religious or philosophical. So mind, soul and spirit are all still in the hands of other fields (philosophy and religion).Nowadays we know very well, that the study of the human psyche is done through psychology. — Shawn
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