Dubrovsky Bernardo
McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Prog Neuropsychopharmacol Biol Psychiatry. 2002 Jan;26(1):1-19. doi: 10.1016/s0278-5846(01)00243-3.
Darwin's theory of evolution, and in particular one of its mechanisms, natural selection, is being used as the explanatory cornerstone of many unsolved problems in human biology and human affairs. Psychiatry is an example of that. Darwinian psychiatry's main proponents endorse the adaptationist program to carry out their project to implement an evolutionary psychiatry. The adaptationist program is an attempt to view all evolutionary novelties as adaptations, i.e., classically, features that favour survival and/or reproduction. This position is definitely teleological, and anthropomorphism plays a central role in its construction. This paper takes issue with the adaptationist approach. We argue that organism-environment interactions are bidirectional processes. Hence, as a result of the fact that "a surprisingly large amount of the environment, which affects natural selection on an animal is the more or less direct result of the animals own behavior" [Waddington, C.H., 1976. Evolution of the subhuman world. In: Jantsch, E., Waddington, C.H. (Eds.), Evolution of Consciousness. London, UK, pp. 11-23], a more appropriate term to describe these interactions appears to be construction rather than adaptation alone [Lewontin, R., 2000. The triple helix: gene organism and environment. Harvard Univ. Press]. We present factual anatomical, physiological and clinical data critical of the platonic Kraepelinean classification of mental diseases, and claim that this classification is contrary to modern ideas on the evolution of nervous systems. We argue against the view of mainstream evolutionary psychiatrists that mental diseases are adaptations. We do so on two accounts. One is methodological; authors in this position do not ask whether every disease has evolutionary causes, but assume this in order to explain all diseases in such terms. The other mistake is biological; it is their belief that adaptation is the driving force of evolution while in fact it is just an outcome of evolution. The current status of the controversy between cognitive versus emotional experiences as essentially independent is reviewed, and evidence is presented, that they cannot be considered platonic, categorically independent functions of CNSs. These data, taken together, plus arguments derived from the high degree of plasticity of nervous systems, lead us to suggest a different approach to classification of mental diseases.
达尔文的进化论,尤其是其机制之一——自然选择,正被用作解释人类生物学和人类事务中许多未解决问题的基石。精神病学就是一个例子。达尔文主义精神病学的主要支持者赞同适应主义纲领,以开展他们实施进化精神病学的项目。适应主义纲领试图将所有进化新奇事物视为适应,即经典地说,是有利于生存和/或繁殖的特征。这种立场绝对是目的论的,拟人化在其构建中起着核心作用。本文对适应主义方法提出质疑。我们认为生物体与环境的相互作用是双向过程。因此,由于“影响动物自然选择的环境中,有相当大一部分或多或少是动物自身行为的直接结果”[沃丁顿,C.H.,1976年。《亚人类世界的进化》。载于扬奇,E.,沃丁顿,C.H.(编),《意识的进化》。英国伦敦,第11 - 23页],描述这些相互作用的一个更合适的术语似乎是建构,而不仅仅是适应[列万廷,R.,2000年。《三螺旋:基因、生物体和环境》。哈佛大学出版社]。我们给出了批评精神疾病柏拉图式克雷佩林分类法的事实性解剖学、生理学和临床数据,并声称这种分类法与关于神经系统进化的现代观念相悖。我们反对主流进化精神病学家认为精神疾病是适应的观点。我们基于两个理由这样做。一个是方法论上的;处于这种立场的作者没有问每种疾病是否都有进化原因,而是为了用这种方式解释所有疾病而假定如此。另一个错误是生物学上的;他们认为适应是进化的驱动力,而实际上它只是进化的一个结果。回顾了认知与情感体验本质上相互独立这一争议的当前状况,并给出证据表明它们不能被视为中枢神经系统的柏拉图式、绝对独立的功能。综合这些数据,再加上来自神经系统高度可塑性的论据,使我们建议采用一种不同的精神疾病分类方法。