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Healing Psychiatry: Bridging the Science/Humanism Divide (Basic Bioethics)
 
 
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Healing Psychiatry: Bridging the Science/Humanism Divide (Basic Bioethics) [Hardcover]

David H. Brendel (Author), T.M. Luhrmann (Foreword)


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Book Description

Basic Bioethics March 1, 2006
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.

Healing Psychiatry explores these issues from both clinical and theoretical standpoints and uses case histories to support its basic argument. Brendel calls for an open-minded and flexible yet scientifically informed approach to understanding, diagnosing, and treating mental disorders. And he considers the future of psychiatry, applying the principles of clinical pragmatism to a broad range of ethical concerns in psychiatric training and research.


Editorial Reviews

From Scientific American

In his 1983 treatise, The Reflective Practitioner, philosopher Donald Schon explained that many professionals negotiate a tricky landscape between a high ground of theoretical questions and a swampy lowland of messy, real-life situations. The quandary is that the issues of the high ground, though easy to resolve, are relatively unimportant to most people, whereas the swamp involves matters of deep human concern. Should the practitioner remain safe or descend instead into the soup to help real people in real need? Psychiatrists struggle with such tension daily. Practicing their profession requires theory and diagnostic definition, yet reaching a patient requires an emotional bond between the two individuals. David Brendel, an assistant professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School who has academic training in philosophy, explores the complexity of this tension and how it vexes modern mental health care. "The disorder in twenty-first-century psychiatry is all about the search to integrate human values," Brendel writes. "With no objective moral or conceptual compass to orient today’s practitioner, the world of clinical psychiatry remains messy and ill-defined." Despite increasing precision in biological psychiatry, he adds, "inherent limitations" of such approaches often lead to treatment shortfalls when faced with "complex and unpredictable human behavior." Part of the solution, Brendel advises his colleagues, is to invoke a pragmatic approach espoused by the classical American philosophers William James and John Dewey. Together James and Dewey cultivated an eclectic and variegated view of scientific inquiry and discourse that aims for practical consequences for ordinary people. They emphasized the need to remain open-minded when interpreting scientific results, which always arise in a social context that shapes the nature and use of new findings. Along similar lines, Brendel advocates a "clinical pragmatism" that, for example, favors practical results over cumbersome psychological theories, decries moralistic decisions devoid of patient input, and steers clear of attributing greater certainty to clinical interpretations than may actually exist. Fleshing out his pragmatist views, he interweaves case studies with philosophical discourse and vivifies theories with clinical tales. Brendel highlights his message with a New Yorker cartoon captioned "Richard the Pragmatist," in which the king proclaims: "My kingdom for a newer, stabler, more centrally located kingdom!" So, too, for the workaday practitioner, struggling to treat a patient afflicted with recurring depression or anxiety.

Richard Lipkin

Review

"American psychiatry, in its commitment to biological determinism, is in danger of dehumanizing the patient it is attempting to cure. To heal itself, psychiatry must change its philosophical assumptions. I believe that Brendel is absolutely right that it needs to adopt a skeptical, pragmatic, pluralistic outlook. This is an important contribution to the philosophy of psychiatry."
Arnold H. Modell, M.D., Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School

"Healing Psychiatry clarifies what a philosophical pragmatic approach to psychiatry would be. There has been little work done on applying pragmatism to psychiatry, so this is a valuable contribution to the debate. One of the great strengths of this book is that it manages to bridge the gap between philosophy and psychiatry. It is a significant contribution to the fields of medical ethics and philosophy of medicine, pragmatism, medical humanities, and philosophy of psychiatry."
Christian Perring, Department of Philosophy, Dowling College

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 200 pages
  • Publisher: The MIT Press; 1 edition (March 1, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0262025949
  • ISBN-13: 978-0262025942
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.2 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.1 ounces
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,090,789 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

David H. Brendel, M.D., Ph.D. is a psychiatrist who practices in the Boston area. He earned his M.D. at Harvard Medical School and his Ph.D. in philosophy at the University of Chicago. He formerly served as associate medical director of the Pavilion at McLean Hospital, and he currently teaches in the ethics and professionalism course at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Brendel's academic work focuses on psychiatric ethics and the complex relation between scientific and humanistic approaches in psychiatry. His book, Healing Psychiatry: Bridging the Science/Humanism Divide, was published by MIT Press in 2006 and released in paperback in 2009. He has published and spoken extensively on the ethics of using online technologies, such as Google and Facebook, in the clinical practice of medicine and psychiatry. Additional information about Dr. Brendel is available at www.drdavidbrendel.com

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Clashing conceptual approaches have left the science of psychiatry deeply wounded at the start of the new millennium. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
pragmatic psychiatrist, clinical pragmatism, past melancholia, psychiatric reasoning, pragmatic bioethics, ontological materialism, psychogenic seizures, psychiatric ethics, provisional approach, pluralistic set, psychiatric science, clinical explanation, somatic compliance, psychiatric clinicians, philosophical pragmatism, multifactorial causation, clinical psychiatrists, eliminative materialism, nonreductive materialism, clinical formulations, psychiatric researchers
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Billie Holiday, Chestnut Lodge, New England, Sigmund Freud, World Trade Center
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