I could carry on in this discussion making no empirical investigation at all — boethius
Please write a simple list from memory of all the countries and which are oppressive and bad places and which not, since you know this information. — boethius
insofar as a community of psychologists conceive of themselves as part of a global community that includes China and derives their expert legitimacy, in part, from the global nature of the community — boethius
I said 'oppressive regimes which we all know are bad' and I've already provided my list. China. — Isaac
And yet, despite repeated requests you've given not one shred of evidence to demonstrate that this actually happens (outside of your fevered imagination) in anywhere other than oppressive regimes - which we all know already are bad places, so you're not serving up anything new here. — Isaac
Do you even understand your own claim here? That "I am not serving up anything new" because "there is not a shred of evidence this actually happens". — boethius
Yes, that's exactly what I'm claiming. — Isaac
I said 'oppressive regimes which we all know are bad' and I've already provided my list. China. The only place you've drawn any modern examples from. — Isaac
actually happens (outside of your fevered imagination) in anywhere other than oppressive regimes - which we all know already are bad places — Isaac
So according to you, there's evidence this happens in China. — boethius
You're refusal to provide the rest of your "list" — boethius
You're claim in it's formal form is: "there's only evidence where there's obviously evidence! Ha! Show me the evidence!". — boethius
When I inquire about "the obvious nature of the evidence" you are unable to follow through and complete your list of "bad place" that you "already know" — boethius
I've just supplied the rest of my list, China and North Korea. — Isaac
My claim is that I think you, I and anyone else taking part in this discussion would agree that China and North Korea are 'obviously' oppressive regimes. — Isaac
And yet, despite repeated requests you've given not one shred of evidence to demonstrate that this actually happens (outside of your fevered imagination) in anywhere other than oppressive regimes - which we all know already are bad places, so you're not serving up anything new here. — Isaac
You're key operative claim here is "oppressive regimes - which we all know are bad places". — boethius
The OP is literally entitled "Mental health under an illegitimate state".
So, either your complaint is "you're just analyzing the OP, what's up with that?".
Or, then you're trying to say something less transparently bad faith, relating "we all know" to "oppressive regimes", — boethius
Psychologists are agents of the state because they need state license to practice psychology (whether clinical or research) and therefore must conform to state policy to get and maintain such license. They represent state authority when dealing with individual patients or research subjects (far more so, when doing so with state and/or state proxi corporate subsidy). — boethius
"Oppressive regimes - which we all know are bad places" is not a claim, it's a qualifier. Not the set {oppressive regimes}, but the subset {oppressive regimes which we all know are bad places}. — Isaac
You claimed that psychogists were agents of the state because they required state permission to carry out their research. Forget the title of the thread, you made a claim within it and I'm disputing that claim. — Isaac
My claim is that they are not generally agents of the state because they do not generally need a licence to practice psychological research, they do not have to conform to state policy to do research. — Isaac
Psychologists are selected because they already agree with state policy (there is a large state apparatus one needs to navigate to become a psychologist with lot's of filtering at lot's of steps), — boethius
Psychologists need permission from the state to carry out research or then to "cure people" — boethius
Psychologists receive state subsidy (directly or from state proxies) to get the resources to do research (vast majority of the time). — boethius
I've already mentioned legitimate sates also maintains policy through these mechanisms, — boethius
Psychologists do not need a degree (which is a license from the state) to be a "psychologist"...? , — boethius
nor "generally" work in institutions that contain a large network of people and state licenses for those people and institution as a whole...? , — boethius
nor get permission from various oversight boards (which are specific license to perform specific actions) to conduct human experiments on a case by case basis? — boethius
Psychologists do not "generally need" state subsidy directly, or through proxies, to perform their research? — boethius
We all know they need lot's of licenses to interact with research subjects — boethius
No there isn't. Universities are mostly private institutions and the state plays no part in their curriculum nor their decision about who to award doctorates to. — Isaac
And yet, despite repeated requests you've given not one shred of evidence to demonstrate that this actually happens (outside of your fevered imagination) in anywhere other than oppressive regimes - which we all know already are bad places, so you're not serving up anything new here. — Isaac
I wasn't there, but unenlightened maybe able to provide us more insight into what may have lead to such lack of historical evidence. — boethius
Indeed the whole curriculum is now measured in a ghastly points system derived from the Open University, where each module counts so many points at this or that level, and so many points get you a degree. A national system about as independent of state control as something that is totally controlled by the state. — unenlightened
I'm not getting the link here. How does the government's cackhanded attempt to make degrees into quantifiable commodities actually make any difference to the research (which is the point that's trying to be made here). It's not enough to point to some bungled government intervention in the grading system and just insinuate the rest. — Isaac
you cannot notice how this aligns with the institution of the national curriculum for schools and centralises control of the content of education courses t all levels, and thus of what anyone might be qualified and competent, never mind funded, to research, then I really don't know what anyone might say to you that would start to be "enough". — unenlightened
when psychologists are free to do whatever they like, some of them like to do things that are frankly abhorrent and inhumane. And you are trying to convince us that they are completely out of control. — unenlightened
mental illness seems to constitute a failure to sufficiently conform to the norms of a social situation. ADHD is a failure to conform to the norms of typically a school type situation. homosexuality is a failure to conform to the sexual norms, Drapetomania is a failure to conform to the norms of enslavement, Hysteria is a failure to conform to the norms of femininity, and so on. So as society changes, mental illness changes. — unenlightened
I wonder,... what the morality is of sharing the results of such research, with other countries where it is perhaps still considered a mental illness and a crime. One might not want to share the gay recognition software that might be developed, for example. — unenlightened
in my limited experience of Chinese students and professors I've not found them particularly 'state tools' they're mostly pissed at the restrictions the government place on them. — Isaac
I really cannot see a mechanism for infusing any meaningful kind of government policy into psychological research. — Isaac
I'm so ignorant I don't know what the Chinese government's position on homosexuality. But with a totalitarian regime, you do what you're told, pissed or not, if you want to practice at all. — unenlightened
A-level psychology becomes more commonly offered as a course. It is quite likely to start in those places that anyway have smaller classes - not state schools. Psychology departments might come to like the qualification, but not everyone gets the opportunity. So a class bias is introduced into the intake. — unenlightened
And that leads to a political bias towards conservatism — unenlightened
also affects on average the kind of assumptions about 'normality' that are made and the kind of questions that are asked. — unenlightened
So for an example from mainstream psychology, one finds a deal of interest in intelligence tests (because we like measuring stuff) that coincidentally (???) favour white Western-educated middle and upper-class folks and is championed by Eysenck who uses it to promote what turns out to be a fake scientific racism. — unenlightened
The focus is on the child, with...communication of the test results in the context of the child's particular background, behaviors, and approach to the test items as the main goals. Global scores are deemphasized, flexibility and insight on the part of the examiner are demanded, and the test is perceived as a dynamic helping agent rather than an instrument for placement, labeling, or other types of academic oppression. In short, intelligent testing is the key. — Alan Kaufman
Doesn't it sound far more like there was simply a range of opinions in psychology which broadly reflect the range of opinions of society at the time? — Isaac
Is psychology then a matter of opinion? Nothing much more than a reflection of the society of the time? Then my work here is done. — unenlightened
I'm trying to counter that the state is not the most significant factor (it's mechanisms are very weak, broad brush, and indirect). — Isaac
I just don't think there's much to see here. Psychology has had some fairly shameful moments, as have most institutions, but it's coming along at least averagely at making the sorts of changes that address those problems. — Isaac
We have rather established that fact and science are not the most significant factors either, but rather fashion and local prejudice. — unenlightened
We have already established that as old diagnosis of mental health issues have been found to be unacceptable, new one have come along to replace them, and that at least some of them are also highly questionable. — unenlightened
we have also established that fairly major fields in psychology aside from psychiatry can also turn out not just to be wrong, but to be politically (ie racially in my example) biased and motivated. — unenlightened
We have already seen quite a lot, and no evidence that fundamental changes in methodology, governance, or anything else have addressed these issues. — unenlightened
Here is the current BPS recommendations if you'd like to check for yourself. In summary, testing must be directed at specified therapeutic goal aimed at -"A person ...judged to be in need of community care or educational services due to a failure to cope with the intellectual demands of their environment and are suffering significant distress or are unable to take care of themselves or their dependents or unable to protect themselves or their dependents against significant harm or exploitation.". IQ testing to prove hogwash pseudoscience about race is contrary to current BPS guidelines.As the concept of learning disabilities may be seen as a social construction...the idea of any permanency of the concept must be questioned...’ — BPS official guidlines on IQ testing
Educational psychologists (EPs) have become increasingly concerned by the number of children being identified as suffering from ADHD and prescribed medication, often without sufficient consideration of systemic factors or adequate professional liaison. Many children living in adversity may demonstrate behaviours that are associated with ADHD, but may be a reaction to stresses in their life rather than as a result of the underlying biology. — Vivian Hill, Chair of the BPS Division of Educational Psychology
Here is the current BPS recommendations if you'd like to check for yourself. — Isaac
https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/psychosis/symptoms/A delusion is where a person has an unshakeable belief in something untrue.
What would it take to convince you that there are fundamental problems? — unenlightened
What I don't do is simply assume there are fundamental problems because there used to be. — Isaac
Let me ask you this in turn. What is the alternative you propose? If we cannot trust psychologists to carry out their duties what do you propose we do? — Isaac
If so, should we do the same to every other institution with a history of reflecting cultural norms? Dismantle the art establishment, stop writing books, disband the judiciary and the bar, raise all universities to the ground, stop all investigation in physics, engineering and medicine? — Isaac
without there having been any significant change in governance or methodology or philosophy, you conclude that this time, it's all perfectly legitimate. — unenlightened
I propose that — unenlightened
we do so with more attention to the nature of the discipline, which is only possibly scientific at the margin where it merges with human biology, and that for the rest we adopt a much more humble and far less dogmatic let alone coercive stance in relation to education and psychiatry in particular — unenlightened
I propose that we acknowledge the inevitably cultural nature of psychology and the reflexive way that theories of psychology change the human behaviour they describe. — unenlightened
there is a great deal wrong with representing this reflection as science. — unenlightened
Earlier you were decrying the whole institution for it's role in advertising, for fear it might learn to detect homosexuality, for it's complicity in torture methods. Now you're saying it's not a science. — Isaac
We didn't supply them with anything, because what we 'discovered' was just hogwash which doesn't even work. — Isaac
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.