Details Regarding Books The Manufacture of Madness
Title | : | The Manufacture of Madness |
Author | : | Thomas Szasz |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Special Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 426 pages |
Published | : | April 1st 1997 by Syracuse University Publications in Continuing Education (first published 1970) |
Categories | : | Psychology. Health. Mental Health. Nonfiction. Medicine. Psychiatry. Philosophy. History |
Thomas Szasz
Paperback | Pages: 426 pages Rating: 4.04 | 224 Users | 16 Reviews
Chronicle Toward Books The Manufacture of Madness
s/t: A Comparative Study of the Inquisition & the Mental Health Movement In this seminal work, Dr. Szasz examines the similarities between the Inquisition and institutional psychiatry. His purpose is to show "that the belief in mental illness and the social actions to which it leads have the same moral implications and political consequences as had the belief in witchcraft and the social actions to which it led."Describe Books Concering The Manufacture of Madness
Original Title: | The Manufacture of Madness: A Comparative Study of the Inquisition & the Mental Health Movement |
ISBN: | 0815604610 (ISBN13: 9780815604617) |
Edition Language: | English URL http://www.szasz.com/ |
Rating Regarding Books The Manufacture of Madness
Ratings: 4.04 From 224 Users | 16 ReviewsDiscuss Regarding Books The Manufacture of Madness
This book explains how and why the modern Institution of Psychiatry has failed humanity. It seems the 16th century witch hunts created more witches than it cured. Likewise, since the practice of psychiatry was formed it seems there are more mentally ill individuals than it cures. If there is any book that has changed my thinking on a topic, such as mental illness, it is this book by psychoanalyst, Thomas Szasz. He points out labeling witches of the Inquisition as mentally ill is as erroneous asThe 9th book I've read by Szasz and the best one yet. A brutal look at how, while the objects of persecution and torture have changed over time, the basic method has not. We used to lock up homosexuals, mutilate masturbators, and burn witches. Now we imprison, bully, intimidate, and drug the depressed, the anxious, drug users, gamblers, and those who hear voices that we cannot hear. Man's desire to destroy what is different has not become more enlightened, it has only changed its mask.
Allows for great dive into the history of the scapegoat phenomenon, exploitance of the stigma of an alien, draws huge similarity between the methods and ends of church in inquisition and state in compulsory medical treatment. What is more, Szasz provides serious grounds to a conclusion that masses that used to burn and execute and now chastise and judge are equally to blame as the instructions who stir them.My take-away here is that sanity is vague by definition and that many people are not
A free thinker's delight. What Szasz says in essense is that social engineering is no more fun from a modern and secular/"scientific" world view than it was from a religious/"moral" world view. The problem with the "enlightened" perspective (in power) down through the ages remains. The right and responsible people need witches and madmen to justify their rightousness and they need jails torture and death sentences to justify their resonsibility. A must read for anyone who has ever been
Brilliant. Well done Mr. Szasz. Of course I disagree with many of his political, religious, and historical analyses, but no one understood the truth about psychiatry like Szasz. Five stars.https://psychiatricsurvivors.wordpres...
This book is a retrospective of the history of madness in medieval and modern Western society, as well as the ways in which madness was viewed by people of different eras. It was very useful in helping me understand how our current beliefs about mental illness developed, and why they are inadequate to fully explain or understand the truth about mental illness.The book is specifically about the Spanish Inquisition and its similarity to modern psychiatry, and while that simile has some veracity to
Thomas Stephen Szasz (pronounced /sas/; born April 15, 1920 in Budapest, Hungary) was a psychiatrist and academic. He was Professor Emeritus of Psychiatry at the State University of New York Health Science Center in Syracuse, New York. He was a prominent figure in the antipsychiatry movement, a well-known social critic of the moral and scientific foundations of psychiatry, and of the socialThis book really is a comparison between modern institutional psychiatry and the inquisitions against witches and Szasz manages four hundred pages of such without becoming overly redundant or facile.The predication of "psychiatry" as "institutional" is vital to Szasz' arguments. Himself a psychoanalytically trained psychiatrist, he has no problems with voluntary contracts between individuals. What exercises his ire is coercion, stigmatization and the confusion of categories.The primary
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