The Legacy of Antipsychiatry

In Thomas Schramme & Johannes Thome (eds.), Philosophy and Psychiatry. De Gruyter. pp. 94-119 (2003)
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Abstract

Antipsychiatry is famous - and infamous - for its claim that there is no such affliction as mental illness. If this proved to be true, the status of psychiatry would change radically. The field of psychiatry would no longer be accepted by many as an integral part of medicine because the primary task of medicine is to cure the ill. The statement that there is no such thing as mental illness appears so highly radical that many hold doubts as to its plausibility. Indeed, it could well be viewed as a totally absurd assumption, because in some cases we can even "see" the illness with persons who are hearing voices or hallucinate. Nevertheless, the claim appears absurd in the first instance only due to the fact that the existence of the phenomena is not denied, rather reference to the meaningful use of the concept of illness is denied. This would indicate that critics of the concept of mental illness do not contest that there are many people with serious mental problems, but maintain that we should not refer to them as being ill. The first cross-purposes in the debate on the concept of mental illness start at this point.

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Thomas Schramme
University of Liverpool

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