boethius What do you think about Stoicism in relation to mental health amidst societal injustice? (Which was the historical context in which Stoicism arose). I see clinical psychology and psychiatry as trying to serve the same ends as Stoicism by (sometimes) different means.
I have severe anger management problems that I’ve struggled with all my life, that I’ve always defended as reasonable anger in response to genuine wrongs, even though my angry responses only ever made things worse for me, not better. Last year I started having crippling panic and anxiety problems over nothing that I could identify (everything in my life was the best it had ever been at that time), which finally made me go looking for medication to help bring that under control. It did, I think, though it took a long time and was uneven in progress so it’s hard to tell.
I say “crippling” literally, in that I was not able to function as well in pursuit of my own goals, not able to get up the guts to face the things that I was panicking about. In retrospect I see my anger problems as crippling in a different way: I could have more effectively done something about the things I was angry about if I hadn’t been so overwhelmed with rage and out of control that I couldn’t think straight.
A calm, clear, focused mind is not necessarily one that is unquestioningly accepting of everything going on. It’s just a mind that is in control of itself, beholden only to its own reason, one that can decide rationally what is or isn’t actually a problem and what the best responding to that problem would be, and then most importantly, is able to do that best response because it is the best response, rather than feeling irrationally compelled to behave differently, hiding under the covers or punching holes in one’s own walls or whatever else one’s overwhelming emotions might otherwise push one to do instead of, you know, solving the problem. — Pfhorrest
The arguments I presented in the Racism issue are from a political perspective of evaluating the state's legitimacy to diagnose mental health issues and the role of psychologists in maintaining state order. Of course, a illegitimate state diagnoses dissidents as mentally ill and people who complain of intolerable working conditions as mentally ill. — boethius
You can verify that mental health providers are agents of the state in making an appointment for the purposes of exploring the justification of arson and looting as a political tool against oppression, if that oppression is really there and what other methods might be available to compete with arson and looting in a struggle against oppression, and to share one's struggle with these issues. I can guarantee you that even if you were to conclude arson and looting was not, not yet anyway, a viable pathway, that this agent of the state will not only provide no useful political analysis but the only consequence of this meeting is that you will be placed on a list. — boethius
For instance, China's "re-education camps" are entirely premised on the diagnosis of mental disease requiring "a cure". — boethius
In promoting and developing a "scientific discipline" that is so easily compatible with such state mechanisms of oppression and social control, fitting so easily within such a tyrannical structure with the aid of western consultants educated in western institutions of so call learning, the entire international community of psychology, and by extension academic community that tolerate them, are equally guilty in Chinese genocidal re-education crimes. — boethius
However, that being said, we cannot conclude from this that mental health does not exist, only that, without the presumption that agents of the state are there to help, mental health (as well as just living in general) is much more difficult and complicated.
That mental health exists need not be thrown out, only a deep suspicion of agents of the state ability to help provide it. — boethius
However, it is a mistake to view philosophy as a therapy. This contemporary development of "philosophical therapy" is simply the thrashing about of a discipline that is becoming aware of it's inadequacy to deliver any real value to society as a whole and, indeed, being always at the forefront of the greatest crimes against humanity: manipulative mass marketing being the most global and potentially the most harmful activity a group of humans has ever embarked upon. — boethius
the role of philosophy is to invite you to see clearer what is worth tossing aside and what is worth building upon. — boethius
But far from all illegtimate states rely on this. Most just brand dissidents as "traitors to the cause": Robust definitions of mental illness aren't required. — Echarmion
So, who isn't an agent of the state? — Echarmion
Are they? I was not under the impression they're premised on mental disease at all, but rather on lack of proper socialisation. They're called re-education camps after all, not asylums. — Echarmion
Mass marketing is worse than genocide. You heard it here first folks. — Echarmion
Are you interested in my judgement on whether or not your post is worth building upon? — Echarmion
I don't think that follows at all. Maybe it is a sign of sanity in a mad world. — A Seagull
the entire international community of psychology, and by extension academic community that tolerate them, are equally guilty in Chinese genocidal re-education crimes. — boethius
I'm sorry if you've had some bad experiences with psychologists — Isaac
but accusing us of complicity in genocide is not ok. — Isaac
Since academics have the knowledge to understand the global system, have the skills and time to organize themselves, have actions available to disproportionately affect policy, have a supposed dedication to truth and justice, and they do not use their power, but primarily benefit from the global system, therefore they are responsible, perhaps the most responsible of any group, for the destruction the global system has brought to our planet and our people. With knowledge comes responsibility. — boethius
How about complicity in torture? — fishfry
Yes, that too. By what ethical standard does studying some subject somehow make me complicit in the actions of others studying the same subject? — Isaac
If we're to condemn people for the actions of others with whom they share some common field — Isaac
Psychologists did a lot more than "study" torture. If you're unfamiliar with the voluminous body of evidence of the complicity of the psychological profession in the US's torture regime, you're ignorant. — fishfry
The profession's own ethical standards are at issue and the evidence is clear. — fishfry
this [the APAs position] legitimation is in stark contrast to the position adopted by the World Medical Association, its 1975 declaration of Tokyo following the BMA review of the Northern Ireland experience. This declaration proscribed the participation of physicians in designing, or even monitoring, interrogation strategies. This rule was also adopted by both the American Medical Association (AMA) and the American Psychiatric Association.
Moreover, the 1982 United Nations General Assembly addressed the ethical questions associated with the participation of medical and other health workers in the interrogation of detainees. These principles establish as an absolute rule that health workers ‘may not engage, actively or passively, in acts which constitute participation in, complicity in, incitement to or attempts to commit torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment’ (cited in Rubinstein et al., 2005).
Therefore, by allowing psychologists to participate or assist in the interrogation process, the APA is adopting a position out of step with both the medical profession (as Anne Anderson of Psychologists for Social Responsibility pointed out in a letter in 2006 to APA President Gerald Koocher) and the wider UN declaration on health workers, while at the same time making a declaration that appears to condemn psychological torture.
The BPS (2005) made a clear declaration against torture and the participation of psychologists and the use of psychological knowledge in its design.
the last time I saw a therapist it was about work specifically, about how I was self-harming in fits of rage over stress at work, and her recommendation was to leave that job. — Pfhorrest
Point is, my experience kinda flies in the face of boethius’s account. — Pfhorrest
I have no experience with psychologists — boethius
Right you are. I was referring to American psychologists, the American Psychological Association, and good old all-American torture. USA! USA! USA! — fishfry
That is what we hippies call 'a heavy trip' you're laying on us. It took me right back to the early seventies at uni, where, in the final year all my fellow revolutionaries ditched the flares for sharp suits, cut their hair to conventional length and started going to interviews with ICI and applying for teacher-training courses. And the story was that they were going to 'fight for change from within. Perhaps they believed it; I never did. — unenlightened
I suggest that what is needed is despair. In 1968 the doomsday clock was at 2 minutes to midnight, and I did not expect to become old. And now there is a similar despair amongst the youth that their world will remain inhabitable. But as long as academics think academia inhabitable, they will not despair of it enough to risk their lives and livelihoods. — unenlightened
academics need to "adult up" and realize there is no point teaching the young to manage a world that cannot plausibly be argued will be there. There's not even any plausible jobs now, so I'm not sure what their apologetics even consists of today, justifying why these "lefty professors" go through the motions anyway ... ah yes, the money, I agree there. — boethius
privileged corporate executive — boethius
It would seem there's no 'account' at all, just some fantasy being played out where psychologists are agents of the deep state - we're hoping to secure the film rights. — Isaac
Psychologists are agents of the state because they need state license to practice psychology (whether clinical or research) — boethius
I am referring to academic psychologists and clinical psychologists, both, of whom, cannot "do their work" without the state. — boethius
I have already explained that they are selected because their beliefs conform to state policy. — boethius
Well, why don't you show us the way? What is it the world of the — Isaac
is doing that's not just going through the motions for the money. — Isaac
I am also an agent of the state as a corporate executive. From time to time I de facto represent the state and state policy in diplomatic engagements, and, most importantly, I receive state subsidy to carry out state policy.
The modern corporations are extensions of state power, they cannot even formally exist without the state, are the primary beneficiary of the state judiciary, police force, infrastructure, defense activity etc. — 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. — boethius
Where, in non-clinical psychology, does the state dictate research policy? Which psychology policy document has the state been in executive control of, and which sections of it represent restrictions based on state policy? — Isaac
I have already stated that the mechanism is the state selecting for people who already believe in state policy, most importantly of all that the state is legitimate. — boethius
Change is hard work, uncomfortable and uncertain. we don't like it. — unenlightened
We are all agents of change, we can’t help it. — Brett
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