The Myth of Mental Illness: 50 Years Later: Permissions Reprints
The Myth of Mental Illness: 50 Years Later: Permissions Reprints
The Myth of Mental Illness: 50 Years Later: Permissions Reprints
Thomas Szasz The Psychiatrist 2011 35: 179-182 Access the most recent version at doi:10.1192/pb.bp.110.031310
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Correspondence to Thomas Szasz (tszasz@aol.com) First received 16 Jun 2010, accepted 16 Nov 2010
Summary Fifty years ago I noted that modern psychiatry rests on a basic conceptual error - the systematic misinterpretation of unwanted behaviours as the diagnoses of mental illnesses pointing to underlying neurological diseases susceptible to pharmacological treatments. I proposed instead that we view persons called mental patients as active players in real life dramas, not passive victims of pathophysiological processes outside their control. In this essay, I briey review the recent history of this culturally validated medicalisation of (mis)behaviours and its social consequences. Declaration of interest None.
In my essay The myth of mental illness, published in 1960, and in my book of the same title which appeared a year later, I stated my aim forthrightly: to challenge the medical character of the concept of mental illness and to reject the moral legitimacy of the involuntary psychiatric interventions it justies.1,2 I proposed that we view the phenomena formerly called psychoses and neuroses, now simply called mental illnesses, as behaviours that disturb or disorient others or the self; reject the image of the patients as the helpless victims of pathobiological events outside their control; and withdraw from participating in coercive psychiatric practices as incompatible with the foundational moral ideals of free societies.
now legally responsible for preventing his patient from being dangerous to himself or others.3 In short, psychiatry is thoroughly medicalised and politicised. The opinion of ofcial American psychiatry - embodied in the ofcial documents of the American Psychiatric Association and exemplied by its diagnostic and statistical manuals of mental disorders - bears the imprimatur of the federal and state governments. There is no legally valid non-medical approach to mental illness, just as there is no legally valid non-medical approach to measles or melanoma.
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organs. If we accept this denition of disease, then it follows that mental illness is a metaphor - asserting that view is stating an analytic truth, not subject to empirical falsication. The Myth of Mental Illness offended many psychiatrists and many mental health patients as well. My offense - if it be so deemed - was calling public attention to the linguistic pretensions of psychiatry and its pre-emptive rhetoric. Who can be against helping suffering patients or providing patients with life-saving treatment? Rejecting that jargon, I insisted that mental hospitals are like prisons not hospitals, that involuntary mental hospitalisation is a type of imprisonment not medical care, and that coercive psychiatrists function as judges and jailers not physicians and healers. I suggested that we discard the traditional psychiatric perspective and instead interpret mental illnesses and psychiatric responses to them as matters of morals, law and rhetoric, not matters of medicine, treatment or science.
The secularisation of everyday life - and, with it, the medicalisation of the soul and of personal suffering intrinsic to life - begins in late 16th-century England. Shakespeares Macbeth is a harbinger. Overcome by guilt for her murderous deeds, Lady Macbeth goes mad: she feels agitated, is anxious, unable to eat, rest or sleep. Her behaviour disturbs Macbeth, who sends for a doctor to cure his wife. The doctor arrives, quickly recognises the source of Lady Macbeths problem and tries to reject Macbeths effort to medicalise his wifes disturbance:
This disease is beyond my practice . . . unnatural deeds Do breed unnatural troubles: infected minds To their deaf pillows will discharge their secrets: More needs she the divine than the physician. (Act V, Scene 1)7
Macbeth rejects this diagnosis and demands that the doctor cure his wife. Shakespeare then has the doctor utter these immortal words, exactly the opposite of what psychiatrists and the public are now taught to say and think:
Macbeth. How does your patient, doctor? Doctor. Not so sick, my lord, As she is troubled with thick coming fancies, That keep her from her rest. Macbeth. Cure her of that. Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased, Pluck from the memory a rooted sorrow, Raze out the written troubles of the brain And with some sweet oblivious antidote Cleanse the stuffed bosom of that perilous stuff Which weighs upon her heart? Doctor. Therein the patient Must minister to himself. (Act V, Scene 3)7
Shakespeares insight that the mad person must minister to himself is at once profound and obvious. Profound because witnessing suffering calls forth in us the impulse to help, to do something for or to the sufferer. Yet also obvious because understanding Lady Macbeths suffering as a consequence of internal rhetoric (imagination, hallucination, the voice of conscience), the remedy must also be internal rhetoric (selfconversation, internal ministry). Perhaps a brief comment about internal rhetoric is in order here. In my book The Meaning of Mind,8 I suggest that we view thinking as self-conversation, as Plato had proposed. Asked by Theaetetus to describe the process of thinking, Socrates replies: As a discourse that the mind carries out about any subject it is considering . . . when the mind is thinking, it is simply talking to itself.8 (This is a modern translation. The ancient Greeks had no word mind as a noun.) By the end of the 19th century, the medical conquest of the soul is secure. Only philosophers and writers are left to discern and denounce the tragic error. Sren Kierkegaard warned:
In our time . . . it is the physician who exercises the cure of souls . . . And he knows what to do: [Dr.]: You must travel to a watering-place, and then must keep a riding-horse . . . and then diversion, diversion, plenty of diversion . . . - [Patient]: To relieve an anxious conscience? - [Dr.]: Bosh! Get out with that stuff! An anxious conscience! No such thing exists any more (p. 57).9
Today, the role of the physician as curer of the soul is uncontested.10 There are no more bad people in the world, there are only mentally ill people. The insanity defence
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annuls misbehaviour, the sin of yielding to temptation and tragedy. Lady Macbeth is human not because she is, like all of us, a fallen being; she is human because she is a mentally ill patient who, like other humans, is inherently healthy/ good unless mental illness makes her sick/ill-behaved: The current trend of critical opinion is toward an upward reevaluation of Lady Macbeth, who is said to be rehumanized by her insanity and her suicide (http:// act.arlington.ma.us/shows/index.html#mbeth).9
human service and for the legal order of society, the person as patient is supremely important. Why? Because the practice of Western medicine is informed by the ethical injunction, primum non nocere, and rests on the premise that the patient is free to seek, accept or reject medical diagnosis and treatment. Psychiatric practice, in contrast, is informed by the premise that the mental health patient may be dangerous to himself or others and that the moral and professional duty of the psychiatrist is to protect the patient from himself and society from the patient.3 According to pathological-scientic criteria, disease is a material phenomenon, a veriable characteristic of the body, in the same sense as, say, temperature is a veriable characteristic of it. In contrast, the diagnosis of a patients illness is the judgement of a licensed physician, in the same sense as the estimated value of a work of art is the judgement of a certied appraiser. Having a disease is not the same as occupying the patient role: not all sick persons are patients and not all patients are sick. Nevertheless, physicians, politicians, the press and the public conate and confuse the two categories.12
The late Roy Porter, the noted medical historian, summarised my thesis as follows:
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All expectations of nding the aetiology of mental illness in body or mind - not to mention some Freudian underworld - is, in Szaszs view, a category mistake or sheer bad faith . . . standard psychiatric approaches to insanity and its history are vitiated by hosts of illicit assumptions and questions mal s.16 pose
Notwithstanding Bleulers vast, worldwide inuence on psychiatry, psychiatrists ignored his plea to resist obeying the cruel views of society. Ironically, the opposite happened: Bleulers invention of schizophrenia lent impetus to the medicalisation of the longing for non-existence, led to the creation of the pseudoscience of suicidology and contributed to landing psychiatry in the moral morass in which it now nds itself.
References
1 Szasz T. The myth of mental illness. Am Psychol 1960; 15: 113-8. 2 Szasz T. The Myth of Mental Illness: Foundations of a Theory of Personal Conduct. Hoeber-Harper, 1961; rev. ed. HarperCollins 1974, 2000. 3 Szasz T. Psychiatry and the control of dangerousness: on the apostrophic function of the term mental illness. J Med Ethics 2003; 29: 227-30. 4 Clinton WJ. Remarks at the White House Conference on Mental Health, June 7, 1999. Public Papers of the Presidents of the United States: William J. Clinton, 1999, Book 1, January 1 to June 30, 1999: 895. U.S. Government Printing Ofce, National Archives and Records Administration, Ofce of the Federal Register, 2000. 5 Satcher D. Satcher discusses MH issues hurting black community. Psychiatr News 1999; 34: 6. 6 Szasz T. Psychiatry: The Science of Lies. Syracuse University Press, 2008. 7 Shakespeare W. Macbeth (ed A Harbarge): 100-1. Penguin Classics. 8 Szasz T. The Meaning of Mind: Language, Morality, and Neuroscience: 1-2. Syracuse University Press, 2002. 9 Kierkegaard S. A visit to the doctor: can medicine abolish the anxious conscience? In Parables of Kierkegaard (ed TC Oden): 57. Princeton University Press, 1978. 10 Hawthorne N. (1850) The Scarlet Letter: 124-5. Bantam Dell, 2003. 11 Canguilhem G. On the Normal and the Pathological: 46. D Reidel, 1978. 12 Szasz T. Diagnoses are not diseases. Lancet 1991; 338: 1574-6. 13 Grenander ME (ed) Asclepius at Syracuse: Thomas Szasz, Libertarian Humanist. State University of New York, Mimeographed, 1980. 14 Hoeller K. Thomas Szasz: moral philosopher of psychiatry. Rev Existent Psychol Psychiatry 1997; 23: 1-301. 15 Vatz RE, Weinberg LS. The rhetorical paradigm in psychiatric history: Thomas Szasz and the myth of mental illness. In Discovering the History of Psychiatry (eds MS Micale, R Porter): 311-30. Oxford University Press, 1994. 16 Porter R. Madness: A Brief History: 1-3. Oxford University Press, 2002. 17 Bleuler E. Dementia Praecox or the Group of Schizophrenias (transl J Zinkin): 488-9. International Universities Press, 1911.
I want to note here that it would be a serious mistake to interpret this passage as endorsing the view that we psychiatrists - dene and devalue individuals diagnosed with schizophrenia as having lives not worth living. To the contrary, Bleuler - an exceptionally ne person and compassionate physician - was pleading for the recognition of the rights of schizophrenics to dene and control their own lives and that psychiatrists not deprive them of their liberty to take their own lives.
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