Publication

2006 - MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, Massachusetts

Language

English

Word Count

44,500 words, Guess

Page Count

178 pages

Identifiers

and 2 more
  • Goodreads525552
  • LibraryThing1747239

Classifications

  • DDC174.2/9689
  • LCCRC455.2.E8 B74 2006

Description

"Psychiatry today is torn by opposing sensibilities. Is it primarily a science of brain functioning or primarily an art of understanding the human mind in its social and cultural context? Competing conceptions of mental illness as amenable to scientific explanation or as deeply complex and beyond the reach of empirical study have left the field conceptually divided between science and humanism. In Healing Psychiatry David Brendel takes a novel approach to this stubborn problem. Drawing on the classical American pragmatism of Charles Sanders Peirce, William James, and John Dewey, as well as contemporary work of pragmatic bioethicists, Brendel proposes a "clinical pragmatism" that synthesizes scientific and humanistic approaches to mental health care. Psychiatry, he argues, must integrate scientific and humanistic models by emphasizing the practical, pluralistic, participatory, and provisional aspects of clinical diagnosis and treatment. Psychiatrists need to have the skill and flexibility to use scientific and humanistic approaches in a collaborative, open-ended clinical process; they must recognize the complexity of human suffering even as they strive for scientific rigor. This is the only way, he writes, that psychiatry can heal its conceptual rift and the emotional wounds of its patients."--Jacket.

Subjects

Series Statement

  • Basic bioethics

Other Editions

  • Healing psychiatry: bridging the science/humanism divideMIT Press2006-01-01

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