29 November 2018

"Doughnut Psychiatry"?

I have put this post back at the top of this mess of a think tank because I think it is one of the only ones in the blog that is really worth having up.
I am glad it has had 63 views and I hope it has more because I think it has good potential for helping things.
In fact, if anyone wants to share or steal the idea, then steal away please!
No acknowledgement is necessary. This is not copyright or anything.

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"You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a 
new model that makes the existing model obsolete." 
Buckminster Fuller, theorist and proponent of the term "Spaceship Earth."

"Simply rebutting the dominant frame will, ironically, only serve to reinforce it.
And without an alternative to offer, there is little chance of entering, let alone winning,
the battle of ideas." 
Kate Raworth, economist and inventor of "Doughnut Economics".

I wonder if these observations have any relevance to the work of Thomas Szasz, to antipsychiatry and the need to change Psychiatry?

I think Psychiatry is fundamentally irredeemable and flawed.
I confess that I was close to thinking a similar thing about about Economics, until I recently read Kate Raworth's excellent book about that subject - "Doughnut Economics: 7 Ways to Think Like a 21st Century Economist."
Economics and Psychiatry are not the same thing at all.
But it might be useful to compare them. They are both - very broadly speaking - human or social sciences - that purport to deal with specific areas of human life. They are both prey to the drawbacks inherent to supposed social or human sciences - and are different from natural sciences. Social or human sciences sometimes aspire to the certainties of natural sciences, but it is debatable that this can achieved. It is a very important question for the philosophy of science.

"The human "sciences" are not merely unlike the psychical sciences; they are, in many ways, opposites. Whereas nature neither lies nor tells the truth, persons habitually do both."
Thomas Szasz.

In the case of comparing Economics and Psychiatry, one way that they are perhaps similar is that they both have two much sounder disciplines further up the "tree of science" that they both could be said to branch out from.
These two disciplines are perhaps much sounder for often being more speculative. They are Politics or Political Science (which gives rise to Economics) and Psychology (which gives rise to Psychiatry).
....

I have said elsewhere that I am antipsychiatry. I do believe that psychiatry should be abolished as an official medical discipline.

But is there scope for a "Doughnut Psychiatry"?
By this I would mean a radical rethink of Psychiatry in the light of Thomas Szasz's thought, in a similar way to the radical rethink that "Doughnut Economics" gives to conventional economics.
By it I would mean a radically reformed and simplified form of psychiatry, without any medicalization or coercion.

"Doughnut Pyschiatry" could conceivably be medical in the sense that there is conceivably a relation between the physical body including and especially the brain and nervous system and behaviour and mood - but not in the sense that there are such things as "mental illnesses."

All medical treatment in "Doughnut Psychiatry" would be voluntary and an attempt would be made to base it on science. On both of these two points this is the exact opposite of what happens now.

As Szasz said, "The discovery that all so-called "mental diseases" are brain diseases would mean the disappearance of psychiatry into neurology.” ;“No behavior or misbehavior is a disease or can be a disease. There is no mental disease. Period."

He also said: “I don’t deny the existence of brain diseases; on the contrary, my point is that if mental illnesses are brain diseases, we ought to call them brain diseases and treat them as brain diseases."

Szasz certainly recoiled from the term "Antipsychiatry". Which meant he allowed for some kind of psychiatry to exist. He believed people should be free to believe what they like. And if this included psychiatry or alchemy or homeopathy or astrology, then so be it. As a libertarian like him, I also think that people should be free to believe what they like. So do lots of people.

I do indeed think - as did Szasz - that psychiatry is comparable to alchemy, homeopathy or astrology.

It is one thing to tolerate alchemy, homeopathy or astrology - it would be another thing for a society to give them official recognition and support.

I personally think Psychiatry is a pseudoscience and a crime that needs to end. I don't think it can continue and I don't think that it can continue by another name or by its own name. I don't really think we need anything to "replace" psychiatry. If you think that we need anything to "replace" psychiatry, you have probably missed the point.

And yet even having written what I have just written, I still think that for at least two reasons there could be scope for a "Doughnut Psychiatry" - a simplified and re-thought Psychiatry.

Firstly, because of the need for a transition or a midway point being needed between a highly psychiatrized world that we seem to have now, and a minimally psychiatrized world - or indeed a psychiatry-free world - that we seek to head towards.

And secondly because of freedom. People should obviously be free to do what they like. There is no point in opposing coercion if you don't believe in freedom.

This re-thought form of Psychiatry would obviously not have to be called "Doughnut Psychiatry". I am just borrowing a phrase from Economics. It could have another name.

By it I would mean a form Psychiatry that actually helps people with problems in living - if they want that help; and a Psychiatry that utterly disbelieves in "mental illness".
A psychiatry that seeks to help rather than dictate diagnonsenses, stigmatize, imprison and destroy. A genuinely libertarian, non-medical and non-incarceratory psychiatry. A Psychiatry that - for the first time - would conscientiously stick to the Hippocratic Oath of doing no harm in Medicine.

I have just noticed that a doughnut is the same shape as a lifebuoy. It could be a lifebuoy to save people, and to save those who are suddenly thrown overboard by the sinking ship that Psychiatry is.

I have just seen that the same image of its being a lifebuoy obviously applies to the original "Doughnut Economics" itself, and I think that "Doughnut Economics" is genuinely the only lifebuoy that can save humanity from drowning!



"You don't need a reason to help people." A very apposite statement.
A psychiatry that genuinely helped people would be a new thing altogether.

It could in a sense be said that Szasz himself gave it a name: "Szasz proposes an alternative word to indicate psychotherapy – 'Iatrology', or healing with words. 
In his book The Ethics of Psychoanalysis (1965) he calls his form of psychotherapy 'autonomous psychotherapy'".

I do not really think a science of psychiatry is possible whilst it still holds on to the central concept of "Mental Illness".

With this concept totally knocked out of it - so it would leave a hole a bit like the one at the centre of a doughnut - perhaps a scientific Psychiatry could finally begin, and in the meantime it could maybe be a humane and decent practice. Maybe.

The space occupied by the doughnut in "Doughnut Economics" represents a safe and just space for humanity.
In the same way the doughnut in "Doughnut Psychiatry" could represent a safe and just space for the individual - which is free from the outer menace of coercion and free from the central intellectual "black hole" of medicalization.

(I knew I could find at least one reason to call it "Doughnut Psychiatry"!).

"Doughnut Psychiatry", or something like it, could maybe have a role to play.

Unhappiness is obviously not in itself a medical problem. 
But unhappiness could obviously in some way have LINKS to Medicine. It would be these possible links that "Doughnut Psychiatry" could allow for and explore, without becoming in any way unscientific.
................

Below is an attempt at a diagram for the conceptual doughnut that would be involved in "Doughnut Psychiatry". This has made me feel like a bit of a doughnut but there might be something interesting in it.
The inside of the doughnut is meant to be the INDIVIDUAL BIOLOGICAL HUMAN and the outside of the doughnut ring is the SOCIAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL WORLD.



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Please see my blog "MENTAL ILLNESS DOES NOT EXIST":

https://citizensofamidne.blogspot.co.uk/


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P.S. 5th December 2018.

I have just learnt that Szasz wrote about Economics in some detail in his excellent book "Faith in Freedom: Libertarian Principles and Psychiatric Practices" (2004).

In the book, he compares Economics and Psychiatry, and sees many similarities, implying that both are pseudosciences in similar ways.

"Viewed as the study of human action, economics and psychiatry are fraternal twins: economists are concerned mainly with the material and political consequences of choices and actions; psychiatrists, mainly with their political and interpersonal consequences." 
Thomas Szasz.

............





11 November 2018

"I deeply regret the loss of life in the war in Iraq, but I am extremely keen to get stuck into Iran."

Blair is a war criminal and a pathetic, snivelling hypocrite:

He seems to be saying:

"I deeply regret the loss of life in the Iraq war, but I am extremely keen to get stuck into Iran."


The war on Iraq was an illegal crime.
Once we recognize that we will stand more chance of preventing war from happening again and again.

Re-posted 11.11.18 - in honour of the fallen who hoped it would never happen again.

2 November 2018

"The Apprentice" is STILL crying out for a satirical version.

2010: 30th September

In preparation for this channel:

"Emma Goldman to appear on the Apprentice".
I am watching "The Apprentice".
I keep thinking of doing a satirical version where the candidates are all revolutionary lefties.

"Emma Goldman and Dolores Ibarruri were given the task of handing out the deluxe snacks to the public in Covent Garden.........."

Alexander Berkman, Emma Goldman and Dolores Ibarruri ditch their principles and agree to appear on The Apprentice and vie for the job with Sir Lord Alan.

I first had this basic idea in 2010.

It is now 2017 and "The Apprentice" is still painful capitalist propaganda.

It is still simply crying out for a satirical version in which radical anti-capitalist revolutionaries are the contestants. 

And they vie to be the assistants of Comandante Alan Sugar in toppling capitalism. Or something like that.

Alan Sugar: "I am sorry Mr. Guevara but your handling of that ambush of the capitalist lackeys was amateurish. Che Guevara - you're FIRED!"
Che Guevara: "Thanks, Comandante Azucar. Was pleasure being bossed by you." *gets up and leaves*
--------------------------------



Everything in "The Apprentice" is based upon the assumption that the reason for production and services is solely to make money and profit.

It needs to be said and screamed out loud until it becomes a reality - production should be for need not profit.

Everything in "The Apprentice" is based upon the assumption that everything is a competition between individuals and products and services. The whole idea of co-operation is not allowed for.

The environment and society as a whole are not really permissible concepts in the world of "The Apprentice".

----------------------------------------------------------

It is now 2018. It's been EIGHT years. EIGHT fucking years. A long fucking time.

How long must we sing this song? How long has the Apprentice been going for?

This tired and cringeworthy yet addictive format is still being churned out every week.

And YES it is still absolutely CRYING OUT for a satirical version based on revolutionary leftists trying to get the job with Sir Alan.

It could be called "APPRENTICE REVOLUTIONARY" and it could say so much in such a short time.

If no one else does it maybe one of these days I will write a script for it.

As I keep trying to tell myself, you can only go forwards in life - so let's do it some time.





22 October 2018

My intellectual heroes.

My intellectual heroes include:-

Bertrand Russell, Karl Popper, Thomas Szasz, Noam Chomsky, Karen Armstrong and Kenan Malik.

12 May 2018

"Divide and Rule" is not dead

"Divide and Rule" is not dead.
A rival think-tank - the right-wing "Resolution Foundation" - has seriously spoken of giving young people large financial handouts when they become 25. This is supposedly because the "social contract" between the generations has broken down.
There is no social contract between the generations. What nonsense!
It is incredible that this nonsense made the front page of the Guardian - supposedly the most radical of the mainstream papers.
It is highly unlikely to happen, and is an example of government by the media and diversion by the media.
"Divide and Rule" is not dead. In this case dividing society by generations. A new trick.
The housing crisis is caused by the abandonment of social democratic principles.
Not by any difference between the generations.
Poverty exists in all generations.

1 May 2018

Thomas Szasz essay, 1979.

"Male and Female Created He Them" by Thomas Szasz. 1979.

IN the old days, when I was a medical student, if a man wanted to have his penis amputated, my psychology professors said that he suffered from schizophrenia, locked him up in an asylum and threw away the key. Now that I am a professor. my colleagues in psychiatry say that he is a “transsexual,” my colleagues in urology refashion his penis into a perineal cavity they call a vagina, and Time magazine puts him on its cover and calls him “her.” Anyone who doubts that this is progress is considered to be ignorant of the discoveries of modern psychiatric sexology, and a political reactionary, a sexual bigot, or something equally unflattering.

Like much of the medical‐psychiatric mendacity characteristic of our day, the official definition “transsexualism” as a disease comes down to the strategic abuse of language — epitomized by confusing and equating biological phenomena with social roles (in the present case, chromosomal sexual identity with acting as a man or a woman). Although there are connections between these concepts and facts, neither one “causes'.’ or “determines” the other.

Because “transsexualism” involves, is indeed virtually synonymous with, extensive surgical alterations of the “normal” human body, we might ask what would happen, say, to a man who went to an orthopedic surgeon, told him that he felt like a right‐handed person trapped in an ambidextrous body and asked the doctor to cut off his perfectly healthy left arm? What would happen to a man who went to a urologist, told him that he felt like a Christian trapped in a Jewish body, and asked him to re‐cover the glans of his penis with foreskin? (Such an operation may be alluded to in I Corinthians, 7:17‐18.) “But,” the medically informed reader might object, “isn't transsexualism a disease? Isn't it — in the grandly deceptive phrase of the American psychiatric establishment used to characterize all ‘mental diseases’ — ‘just like any other illness'?” No, it is not. The transsexual male is indistinguishable from other males, save by his desire to be a woman. ("He is a woman trapped in a man's body” is the standard rhetorical form of this claim.) If such a desire qualifies as a disease, transforming the desiring agent into a “transsexual,” then the old person who wants to be young is a “transchronological,” the poor person who wants to be rich is a “transeconomical,” and so on. Such hypothetical claims and the requests for “therapy” based on them (together with our cognitive and medical responses to them) frame, in my opinion, the proper background against which our contemporary beliefs and practices concerning “transsexualism” and transsexual “therapy” ought to be viewed.

Clearly, not all desires are authenticated in our society as diseases. Why the desire for a change in sex roles is so authenticated is analyzed with great sensitivity and skill by Janice Raymond in “The Transsexual Empire.” Arguing that “medicine and psychology ... function as secular religions in the area of transsexualism,” she demonstrates that this “condition” is now accepted as a disease because advances in the technology of sex‐conversion surgery have made certain alterations in the human genitals possible and because such operations reiterate and reinforce traditional patriarchal sex‐role expectations and stereotypes. Ostensibly, the “transsexers” (from psychologists to urologists) are curing a disease; actually, they engage in the religious and political shaping and controling of “masculine” and “feminine” behavior. Miss Raymond's development and documentation of this thesis is flawless. Her book Is an important achievement.

The claim that males can be transformed, by means of hormones and surgery, into females, and vice versa, is, of course, a lie. ("She‐males” are fabricated in much greater numbers than “he‐females.") Chromosomal sex is fixed. And so are one's historical experiences of growing up and living as boy or girl, man or woman. What, then, can be achieved by means of “transsexual therapy"? The language in which the reply is framed is crucial — and can never be neutral. The transsexual propagandists claim to transform “women trapped in men's bodies” into “real” women and want then to be accepted socially as females (say, in professional tennis). Critics of transsexualism contend that such a person is a “male‐to‐constructed‐female” (Miss Raymond's term), or a fake female, or a castrated male transvestite who wears not only feminine clothing but also feminine‐looking body parts. Miss Raymond quotes a Casablanca surgeon, who has operated on more than 700 American men, characterizing the transsexual transformation as follows: “I don't change men into women. I transform male genitals into genitals that have a female aspect. All the rest is in the patient's mind ".
Not quite. Some of the rest is in society's “mind.” For the fact is that Renee Richards was endorsed by Billie Jean King as a real woman and was accepted by the authorities monitoring women's professional tennis as a “real woman.” This authentication of a “constructed female” as a real female stands in dramatic contrast to the standard rules of Olympic competition in which the contestants’ bodily contours count for nothing, their sexual identity being based solely on their chromosomal makeup.

Miss Raymond has rightly seized on transsexualism as an emblem of modern society's unremitting — though increasingly concealed — antifeminism. And she correctly emphasizes that “the terminology of transsexualism disguises the reality ... that transsexuals ‘prove’ they are transsexuals by conforming to the canons of the medical‐psychiatric institution that evaluates them on the basis of their being able to pass as stereotypically masculine or feminine, and that ultimately grants surgery on this basis.” The “transsexual empire” is thus a Trojan horse in the battle between the sexes, helping men to seduce unsuspecting women, or women who ought to know better, to join forces with their oppressors.

Still, why should anyone (especially feminist women) object to men wanting to become women? Isn't imitation the highest form of flattery? Precisely herein lies the “liberal” sexologists’ betrayal of human dignity and integrity: They support the (male) transsexual's claim that he wants to be a woman — when, in fact, what he wants is to be a caricature of the male definition of “femininity.” What makes transsexual surgery a male‐supremacist obscenity is the fact that transsexing surgeons do not perform the operation on all clients (just for the money) but insist that the client prove that he can “pass” as a woman. That is as if Catholic priests were willing to convert only those Jews who could prove their Christianity by socially appropriate acts of antiSemitism. Janice Raymond's analysis is bitterly correct. The very existence of the “transsexual empire” is evidence of the persistence of our deep‐seated religious and cultural prejudices against woman.

The war between the sexes is a part of our, human heritage. It's no use denying It. If that war ever ends, it will be not because of a phony armistice arranged by doctors, but because men, women and children will place personal dignity before social sex‐role identity.

 
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In the above essay from 1979 Szasz points out the glaringly obvious.

What does it say about us that by 2018 doing so has become so controversial?



Women and psychiatry

Women are more likely to be victims of psychiatry than men.

3 April 2018

It is the case.

I wrote the following two comments under an article by the Critical Psychiatrist Joanna Moncrieff:

You write the following: “We should acknowledge, however, that neurological conditions cannot always be detected in the brain, and may only be identified through the characteristic way in which they are manifested in publicly observable behaviour. This does make judging what is and is not a brain disease a complex and imprecise matter in some cases.”
Surely a “neurological condition” is absolutely always potentially detectable in the brain (or nervous system) – by virtue of its being a physical neurological condition. What “is and is not a brain disease” is not really a question of judgement, but of science. Until a disease is categorically scientifically identified, how can it be said to exist at all?
Also – how can a “neurological condition” be completely “identified” by its manifestation in behaviour? Surely this is a category error. Surely a “neurological condition” can only be fully and unequivocally identified by a physical examination of the B.C.N. – brain and central nervous system – of some kind.
Joanna Moncrieff's reply to my comments was as follows:
Hi citizen sofa,
This is not the case. Dementia, including Alzheimer’s disease, is not diagnosed by brain imaging or any other physical tests. As a group, people with a diagnosis of dementia have more of the brain pathology associated with aging than those who do not (plaques and tangles and infarcts identified in brain scans), but most people at a certain age have some of this pathology and there is overlap (ie. a person without dementia may have more pathology than an individual with it). Brain imaging cannot therefore be used to make a diagnosis, and no other physical tests specifically identify dementia either. Dementia is diagnosed by someone’s behaviour and performance on tests of cognitive function.
I think people do not realise this because if you look at information on diagnosing dementia it is very vague and does not make this clear. When someone is being investigated for possible dementia, they will have various blood tests and other examinations, but these are for the purpose of excluding other diagnoses (like hypothyroidism) that may be producing the symptoms. Dementia is diagnosed when no other physical explanation of the symptoms (behaviour and cognitive deficits identified on testing) is found.
Source:
https://joannamoncrieff.com/2017/11/27/philosophy-part-6-are-mental-disorders-brain-diseases-in-waiting/

What I wrote in my comments is indeed the case, in spite of what she says above.
Her reply seems to ignore my basic point.
 A neurological condition can indeed only be neurological.
Her reply to my comment shows why Szasz's perspective is absolutely vital, even in areas that are not related to so-called "mental illness".

Szasz was a true upholder of the spirit of science and the Enlightenment.
If dementia is merely degeneration then it is not strictly speaking - and hence not scientifically speaking - a disease. If dementia is not identified in pathology of some kind then it is not a disease - it is merely an observed behaviour.
If it is only observable in behaviour then we cannot say it exists at all. If and when that behaviour is demonstrated to have been directly caused by physical pathology, then we could possibly say that a behaviour has been caused by an illness. We can never say that a behaviour is an illness. It is indeed a category error.
I have already made a similar point in my blog on neuroscience.

[
http://nervescienceisnonsense.blogspot.co.uk/2014/05/clueless-about-alzheimers-disease.html 
]
Szasz's basic point is absolutely right and absolutely vital. A behaviour is not in itself a disease. 
A diagnosis can only mean a disease in the light of the evidence of medical science.

My obvious point is that cancer - for example - would never be diagnosed solely on the basis of changed behaviour. Neither would treatment for it be initiated. You would not give someone oncological brain surgery, merely because they had slurred speech and were very confused. Cancer would only ever be diagnosed on the basis of scientific evidence. Neither should any other disease be diagnosed on the basis of anything other than scientific evidence.
If people need a diagnosis of dementia in order for them to receive the help they need, then I don't believe in sacrificing science for social reasons. If people need a diagnosis for social reasons, then we have a social problem, not necessarily a medical problem. Why should people need a diagnosis to get help? A diagnosis should be a scientific question and nothing else. 

People should get all the help that they need. This applies to everyone and every possible problem. There is simply no need to sacrifice science to the social institution of what remains of the medical profession.

This compromising of science has been going on for too long. And Szasz seems to have been one of the few people aware of it.


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"The Critical Psychiatry Network's position is not in my view psychiatric criticism at all.
It is a plea for what I have long called prettifying the psychiatric plantation. 
Psychiatrists either have the right to forcibly molest persons or they do not have such a right. 
Some things are either-or.  You are either arrested or not arrested. 
You are either sitting here or you are in jail."

Thomas Szasz, 2011.

24 March 2018

Anarchism and socialism now?

My professed anarchism and socialism are not doctrinaire nor "trapped in ideology".

At the most basic, I see my commitment to anarchism and socialism as based in beliefs in both individual freedom and questioning of unjustified coercive power (in the case of anarchism) and social justice and equality (in the case of socialism).
I see them as essential principles and values in my politics.
Similarly I see my general belief in democracy as based on the general principle of freedom and opposition to tyranny, and not necessarily in conflict with a belief in libertarianism or anarchism.
I do of course realize that it does seem contradictory to profess anarchism at the same time as a belief in democracy, and I will write more about this at some point. I see SUBSIDIARITY and DEVOLUTION and GRASS ROOTS DEMOCRACY as important concepts in this regard - as ways of bringing individuals closer to decisions and policies that affect them.
I am also broadly speaking against extreme nationalism, but broadly speaking in favour of democracy, which is possibly another area of ideological conflict and contradiction.

I am not the kind of anarchist that doesn't vote on principle. On the contrary, I believe in voting on principle and I even believe it should be compulsory.

In Steven Pinker's book "Enlightenment Now", I was not fully convinced by his contention that "anarchy" - in the sense of pre-existing chaos and lack of government - is more violent than tyranny.
Even if this is in some sense true, this seems a minor point. I tend to agree with Thoreau that "that government is best which governs the least."

But I was overall very heartened by Pinker's chapter on Democracy and its progress since the Enlightenment and very much convinced by it.
Though he didn't seem to deal with the argument of thinkers like Chomsky that capitalism - private and business ownership and control of production - is in some ways antithetical to democracy.

I remain a Green and I do not think that Pinker successfully dealt with this ideology.
I see this as an example of CULTURAL LAG - where a culture "lags behind" its reality.
In this case it is a cultural lag regarding an ideology that is far more up to date and in tune with reality than Marxism or other nineteenth century ideologies.
I agree with Pinker that it is regrettable that Marxism still has so many adherents today, which I further see as an example of CULTURAL LAG.
I am a humanist environmentalist and I don't believe that Green politics is anti-human.
Green Politics
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_politics
I fully see Green politics as an outgrowth and development and part of the Enlightenment and not being in contradiction with it. It has undoubtedly had influences from Romanticism but I feel that it is fully part of the Enlightenment, and fully compatible with it.

I was glad that Pinker spoke approvingly of non-violence and pointed out that it can work.


10 March 2018

"Civilisation: A Sceptic's View"

Very much enjoyed and learned from "Civilisation: A Sceptic's View" by David Cannadine on BBC Radio 4.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b09sn1hj

8 March 2018

Excellent book - "Who Are We - and Should It Matter in the 21st Century?"

I read "Who Are We - and Should It Matter in the 21st Century?" by Gary Younge and it is an excellent book. I think he is sometimes a little too sympathetic to radical Islam for my liking. It was written nearly a decade ago now, but is still very relevant.
 It has made me think about the issue of identity and identity politics. I am glad he is critical of Eric Hobsbawm's Marxist-inspired insistence that nationalism and identity are not major historical forces. But I hope they become less and less important and I think they will. 

7 March 2018

"Enlightenment Now"

I just forked out the grand sum of twenty one pounds on a nice hardback edition of "Enlightenment Now: The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism and Progress" by Steven Pinker. Which is not mentioning the trees used up! Looks good. I hope he spends all the royalties on something good! I am sure he will.

I believe in enlightenment and in The Enlightenment and I like the optimism - if only because as Winston Churchill said, there is no point being anything else other than an optimist.
He seems to include a belief in market economics with his vision of enlightened humanism, which I would perhaps take issue with.

As he himself notes, "intellectuals are apt to do a spit take when they read a defence of capitalism."
But I don't think this book is in its entirety a defence of capitalism, but a defence of the Enlightenment. And a very good one at that. In economic terms, I think it is as much a defence of development and social democracy, as of capitalism and free markets as such.

I am very much a supporter of Pinker's strong condemnation of Nietzsche and his continuing influence in particular. Freud needs a similar condemnation as well, if you ask me. And for similar reasons.
Freud's views were certainly a threat to reason, science, humanism and progress.
His influence is still a threat to reason, science, humanism and progress.

I must get round to actually reading it properly from cover to cover, hopefully some time in this century. If humanity does last out this century. Hopefully it will.

I have now read it from cover to cover and I am very glad I did. It is very good indeed.

Whilst I am very much inclined to take heed of George Monbiot's criticisms of the way the environment is dealt with in the book [ You can deny environmental calamity -until you check the facts." ], I still like what seems to be the message of the book overall. George Monbiot's words are a little too harsh in places I think; and this book is worth reading and not wholly discredited by a few mistakes or biases.

In particular, I wasn't convinced at all by Pinker's dismissal of the concept of "Sustainability".
We are indeed inevitably a part of the planet's ecosystem and he didn't really face up to that reality to a sufficient extent in my view. And I hope we have reached "Peak Car", but I don't know if we have.
The Ecosystem is not just another mythical "transcendent entity" like the "nation", as he infers - I think it is a valid and scientific concept.

I resent his accusation that so-called "Greenism" is "apocalyptic", but I was relieved to see his advocacy of Ecomodernism and Ecopragmatism, and of a more humanistic environmentalism.
However, I am not sure if these tendencies go far enough in humanity's imperative quest to achieve an ecological civilisation.
I am glad that he accepts that the environment is facing "serious problems", and I agree with his emphasis on Enlightenment optimism, even if things in this regard are perhaps not quite as rosy as he portrays them.

Though, along with George Monbiot, he has swayed me over the issue of nuclear power, which I now support, I remain a convinced Green and I resent his disparagement of that ideology.

On the question of psychology and psychiatry - he comes close to agreeing that psychiatry is over-diagnosing so-called "mental illness", but he still needs to open his eyes to the insult to the Enlightenment that Psychiatry represents. Psychiatry is undoubtedly an affront to reason, science, humanism and progress. I think Thomas Szasz (1920-2012) was a very important thinker on this question and others and was very much in the Enlightenment tradition, particularly with regard to supporting freedom and alleviating human suffering. I do like Pinker's emphasis on reducing suffering with regard to the question of psychology and throughout the book.

John Gray has written of the book "Enlightenment Now" - "To think of this book as any kind of scholarly exercise is a category mistake."  This statement is just ridiculous bullshit. Yes the book is quite polemical, but it is a polemic that is undoubtedly backed up by scholarship.

I certainly believe in enlightenment and in The Enlightenment. And this book is a good manifesto for it and its continuation.

If people need something to believe in, I recommend this book - it is an eloquent riposte to religious and nationalist fundamentalism. I believe yet more in reason, science, humanism and progress. I think, however, that the environment is the biggest challenge faced by the Enlightenment and I was not entirely convinced by his coverage of this topic.

I was overall convinced by the book that many things have indeed got better since the Enlightenment, and that it is due to enlightenment and the Enlightenment. Ideas do indeed matter. I was further convinced that things can get better still.


I now plan to read George Monbiot's "Out of the Wreckage". 

March 30th 2018.

I have now read George Monbiot's "Out of the Wreckage: A New Politics for an Age of Crisis" and I was very impressed.
This is an inspirational book that I think is more in the real world than Pinker's one and makes some real proposals for moving things forward to a better place for humanity.
I like his attack on the politics of selfishness, and his belief that humans are social beings that need to be altruistic and co-operate.
His book is a good basis on which to build progressive ideas.





Two superb books.

"At the Existentialist Café: Freedom, Being, and Apricot Cocktails" and "How to Live: A Life of Montaigne in One Question and Twenty Attempts at an Answer" by Sarah Bakewell are both simply superb books.

1 March 2018

Keynes quote

"The difficulty lies not so much in developing new ideas as in escaping from old ones."
 John Maynard Keynes.

How does this quote help us move on from psychiatry?

3 January 2018

I voted Leave and I support Scottish Independence.

I voted Leave and I support Scottish independence. I don't see a contradiction.
I hate nationalism but I support freedom and anti-imperialism.
The EU is not yet about imperialism, but it needs to be democratized so I voted Leave.
I support Scottish independence because I oppose English imperialism, not because I believe in nationalism.

1 January 2018

"Intellectuals" - Oldies but Goldies

"Intellectuals."

I first published this old blog posting on-line many years ago and I have deleted it many times.
It's an oldie but a goldie.

I include this old blog posting because I believe in freedom of speech and because some kind of wisdom may be revealed by its humour.


The following was a real letter in the humorous, satirical and investigative journal "Private Eye", published in 1992. I stress that I am not its creator.
It is among the finest and funniest pieces of writing ever published in this supremely excellent journal and I have to confess that it actually saved my life. I mean that.
Because until I read it I thought that there was actually something wrong with me.
Here it comes.

"A Scots Intellectual Writes.

Dear Sir,

The dispute in your columns between "Southern Softies" and "Northern Oiks" is becoming a little too heated for my liking.
Can I just weigh in with a few well-chosen words of reason and moderation?
You're all English bastards.

Yours sincerely,

A.Scotsman. Edinburgh, Scotland."


My own response to it - which was not published - was the following:

"An English Intellectual Writes

Dear Sir,

The dispute in Ireland between "Fenian Papist Republican Scum" and "Proddie Orange Brutish Dogs" has always been far too heated for my liking.
Can I just weigh in with a few well-chosen words of reason and moderation?
You're all mad Irish bastards.


Yours sincerely,

A.N. Englishman, London, England.


This last letter is not meant to detract from the truth that the partitioning of Ireland and the denial of full Irish independence are crimes principally committed by the English state and no one else.

In 2018, these humorous comments are still apposite, as the utter nonsense and chaos of "Brexit" wreaks its havoc.

What I can't avoid reflecting on is that things could have been sorted out much more satisfactorily in 1992.

I stress that I don't fully agree with extreme nationalism and I also don't agree with the denial of democracy.

I am an anti-imperialist and I believe in freedom.




"Life is Hypocrisy"

Another oldie but goldie. I wrote this first a few years back. But deleted it.
But I can't see how I can't include it here.

"I was talking to a prostitute the other day. As you do.
She said she had been employed by a Tory councillor, a Labour councillor and then a Liberal and that when she'd done the Liberal she'd nearly said to him "I've done the full set now!"
I said to her. "Wow. It's a shame people can't be more open about this. It's such hypocrisy."
Without a pause she said - as if it was the most obvious thing in the world - "Life is hypocrisy"."

.......................