To say Trump is paranoid, aggressive and mean, erratic, outrageous and concerning (morally) is not to make a diagnosis, merely to suggest that one might want to make one. — unenlightened
Have you read Alice Miller? — unenlightened
When Trump was campaigning and after his election, there were several psychiatrists and psychologists who offered warnings about his deteriorating mental health. They had not examined him yet spoke of possible or likely narcissism, paranoid schizophrenia or dementia. — darthbarracuda
I would think that the really crazy people get spotted out before they can get into office or implode under the pressure. — Posty McPostface
I had intended this thread, not as a discussion about the merits and failings of the orange clown, but as a discussion over the threat psychiatry is to a moral society. — darthbarracuda
When "objectivity", "sanity" and "rationality" are socially conditioned, the idea of a truly free and equal society is conceivably a contradiction in terms. Disregarding the opinion of a "raving madman" because he is a raving madman dismisses this individual's perspective as irrelevant. "Sanity" is a way of (arbitrarily?) separating opinions that "matter" from those that don't. — darthbarracuda
Yet if sanity is defined as an overwhelming majority consensus of what is "real", then the imposition of sanity upon society as a whole is tyrannical. — darthbarracuda
The assumption of the "sane" with regards to the "insane" is that the latter must have something "broken" or deficient. — darthbarracuda
This is dogmatic - what "sane" people describe as, say, paranoid schizophrenia, may actually be a more expansive form of awareness. The "broken mind of the schizophrenic" may actually let light in that is blocked by the normal "sane" mind. — darthbarracuda
A so-called delusional person may actually be more acquainted with reality than the majority. It is not inconceivable that at least some people are mis-diagnosed as insane when they are, in reality, very much so sane. What people call "insanity" can actually be a surplus of sanity. — darthbarracuda
This has a funny consequence: an "insane" person can be oppressed by the "sane" society, and this oppression is ignored as oppression by the sane society in virtue of it being a deficiency of sanity. The insane is silenced, ignored and sometimes locked away in a mental hospital. — darthbarracuda
So a free and equal society is a contradiction in terms for many reasons, the tyranny of sanity being one. — darthbarracuda
f you ask me, I have never seen American society so full of delusion, paranoia, and mistrust. So, if you really think that's a good thing, then you're living in the golden age of insanity. — Posty McPostface
Psychiatry faces a difficult ethical dilemma: when is it permissible to use one's professional medical expertise for political ends?
Furthermore, in a more radical sense: in what way is the psychiatrist's own subjective appropriation of what is "normal" by any means applicable to every single person? How can a society be truly free and equal when the democratic mob establishes a tyranny of "sanity"? — darthbarracuda
Disregarding the opinion of a "raving madman" because he is a raving madman dismisses this individual's perspective as irrelevant. — darthbarracuda
Worldviews are silenced simply because they don't make "sense" to the "sane". The tyranny of sanity is the tyranny of a certain perspective that is more prevalent than others. — darthbarracuda
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