Book by Pallone Nathaniel J
Die Inhaltsangabe kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.
-This work is recommended reading for those who have some familiarity with clinical psychology and the historical treatment of those whose actions are viewed as bizarre. . . . [T]he book provides a stimulating, provocative, and entertaining overview of the contemporary role of psychiatry and how its practitioners, like the Inquisitors of medieval Europe, serve very discernible political ends.- --Thomas Gabor, Contemporary Sociology -The format moves one along; the overview of historical evolution of the concept of -deviancy- and -treatment- is well done. ... I resonate to the ironies portrayed so effectively in pointing up the shifting cultural definitions of -deviate- and -keeper.-- --Wil-liam Schofield, author of Psy-chotherapy -Acontribution to fostering a needed paradigm revolution. ... Very good ideas that have not been expressed elsewhere.- -- James C. Mancuso, coauthor of Schizophrenia "This work is recommended reading for those who have some familiarity with clinical psychology and the historical treatment of those whose actions are viewed as bizarre. . . . [T]he book provides a stimulating, provocative, and entertaining overview of the contemporary role of psychiatry and how its practitioners, like the Inquisitors of medieval Europe, serve very discernible political ends." --Thomas Gabor, Contemporary Sociology "The format moves one along; the overview of historical evolution of the concept of "deviancy" and "treatment" is well done. ... I resonate to the ironies portrayed so effectively in pointing up the shifting cultural definitions of "deviate" and "keeper."" --Wil-liam Schofield, author of Psy-chotherapy "Acontribution to fostering a needed paradigm revolution. ... Very good ideas that have not been expressed elsewhere." -- James C. Mancuso, coauthor of Schizophrenia "This work is recommended reading for those who have some familiarity with clinical psychology and the historical treatment of those whose actions are viewed as bizarre. . . . [T]he book provides a stimulating, provocative, and entertaining overview of the contemporary role of psychiatry and how its practitioners, like the Inquisitors of medieval Europe, serve very discernible political ends." --Thomas Gabor, Contemporary Sociology "The format moves one along; the overview of historical evolution of the concept of "deviancy" and "treatment" is well done. ... I resonate to the ironies portrayed so effectively in pointing up the shifting cultural definitions of "deviate" and "keeper."" --Wil-liam Schofield, author of Psy-chotherapy "Acontribution to fostering a needed paradigm revolution. ... Very good ideas that have not been expressed elsewhere." -- James C. Mancuso, coauthor of Schizophrenia "The format moves one along; the overview of historical evolution of the concept of "deviancy" and "treatment" is well done. ... I resonate to the ironies portrayed so effectively in pointing up the shifting cultural definitions of "deviate" and "keeper."" --Wil-liam Schofield, author of Psy-chotherapy "Acontribution to fostering a needed paradigm revolution. ... Very good ideas that have not been expressed elsewhere." -- James C. Mancuso, coauthor of Schizophrenia
Nathaniel Pallone argues that, whatever else is true of psycho-pathology, it serves purposes which are socially useful. Whatever else is true of its clinical treatment, such treatment functions as a form of social regulation. In societal terms, such treatment may serve purposes quite other than the relief of psychological disease or even the remedy of psychological disorder. If psychopathology had not emerged naturally, society might have needed to engender psychopathogenic conditions both to fulfill socially useful purposes and to elicit that subtle mechanism for social regulation we term "psychotherapy." Pallone constructs his argument by summing up the evidence for two points which apply to all psychotherapeutic practice: that the relief of psychopathology is in no dependable way associated with psychotherapeutic treatment; and that in all schools of psychotherapy, the only clear-cut criterion for terminating treatment is the limit of the patient's financial resources.What surprised me in this manuscript is the stark simplicity with which Pallone constructs his argument [that] society acquires the license to create unlimited [psychological] disease, to define this disease as intolerable, to finance armies of disease alleviators providing 'treatments' that are in even more profound contradiction with each other than were the religions of old.... The illustration[s] make Pallone's argument crystal clear. - Ivan Illich, from the Preface
„Über diesen Titel“ kann sich auf eine andere Ausgabe dieses Titels beziehen.
Versand:
EUR 11,30
Von Vereinigtes Königreich nach USA
Anbieter: PsychoBabel & Skoob Books, Didcot, Vereinigtes Königreich
Hardcover. Zustand: Very Good. Hardcover with unclipped dust jacket. Jacket is worn at extremities and lightly scuffed on front. Small yellow paint marks to lower leading corners of jacket and boards. Contents clean and spine tight. AD. Used. Artikel-Nr. 531959
Anzahl: 1 verfügbar