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- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!pitt!geb
- From: geb@cs.pitt.edu (Gordon Banks)
- Newsgroups: sci.med
- Subject: Re: Occasional "brownouts".
- Message-ID: <17903@pitt.UUCP>
- Date: 24 Dec 92 15:04:11 GMT
- References: <Bz3pDp.9GK@news.iastate.edu> <1992Dec11.111503.518@news.wesleyan.edu> <1992Dec14.140219.528@news.wesleyan.edu>
- Sender: news@cs.pitt.edu
- Reply-To: geb@cs.pitt.edu (Gordon Banks)
- Organization: Univ. of Pittsburgh Computer Science
- Lines: 35
-
- In article <1992Dec14.140219.528@news.wesleyan.edu> RGINZBERG@eagle.wesleyan.edu (Ruth Ginzberg) writes:
-
- >Since then I have been in e-mail correspondence with someone who'd hoped to get
- >me to retract this statement. I do not agree to retract the statement because
- >I am not yet convinced that that which is "mental", of or pertaining to the
- >*mind*, is one-and-the-same with that which is of or pertaining to the *brain*.
- >
- >However, I DO agree with my correspondent that there is a *POLITICAL* danger in
- >trying to distinguish sharply between "mental" & "physical" *illness*, because
- >it allows old patterns of prejudice toward "mental"
- >illness to remain unchallenged. I do not agree that the appropriate course of
- >action is to try to blur the distinction between "brain" events and "mental"
- >events. I believe that the proper course of action is to work toward reducing
- >myth and prejudice about mental illness, and discrimination toward those who
- >suffer from it.
-
- I'd be just as happy to see the word "mental illness" go out of fashion.
- Most diseases like schizophrenia are now considered brain diseases,
- of chemistry if not structure. There are political reasons for retaining
- it as pertaining to fund-raising, governmental appropriations,
- dividing line between what psychiatrists treat and what neurologists
- treat, etc. Certainly epilepsy is much more in the domain of neurology
- and thus "brain" rather than psychiatry "mind". But really, the lines
- between neurology and psychiatry (which were blurred 100 years ago
- and diverged with Freud) are now getting blurry once again as psychology
- is even becoming more physiologically based.
-
- The problem with "mental illness" is people think that means
- "it's all in your mind, you just have to get hold of yourself"
- or some such tommyrot.
- --
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Gordon Banks N3JXP | "I have given you an argument; I am not obliged
- geb@cadre.dsl.pitt.edu | to supply you with an understanding." -S.Johnson
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