Department of Philosophy, Birbeck College, University of London, London, United Kingdom.
J Med Philos. 2020 Nov 30;45(6):598-622. doi: 10.1093/jmp/jhaa009.
Central to the identity of modern medical specialities, including psychiatry, is the notion of hypostatic abstraction: doctors treat conditions or disorders, which are conceived of as "things" that people "have." Mad activism rejects this notion and hence challenges psychiatry's identity as a medical specialty. This article elaborates the challenge of Mad activism and develops the hypostatic abstraction as applied to medicine. For psychiatry to maintain its identity as a medical speciality while accommodating the challenge of Mad activism, it must develop an additional conception of the clinical encounter. Toward elaborating this conception, this article raises two basic framing questions: For what kind of understanding of the situation should the clinical encounter aim? What is the therapeutic aim of the encounter as a whole? It proposes that the concepts of "secondary insight" (as the aim of understanding) and of "identity-making" (as a therapeutic aim) can allow the clinical encounter to proceed in a way that accommodates the challenge of Mad activism.
现代医学专业的核心特征之一,包括精神病学,是实体抽象的概念:医生治疗被视为“人们拥有的”“东西”的病症或障碍。疯狂行动主义拒绝这种概念,因此挑战了精神病学作为医学专业的身份。本文阐述了疯狂行动主义的挑战,并对医学中的实体抽象进行了探讨。为了在容纳疯狂行动主义的挑战的同时保持精神病学作为医学专业的身份,它必须发展对临床接触的另一种理解。为了阐述这种理解,本文提出了两个基本的框架问题:临床接触应该针对什么样的情况理解?整个接触的治疗目标是什么?它提出,“次要洞察力”(作为理解的目标)和“身份构建”(作为治疗目标)的概念可以使临床接触以一种容纳疯狂行动主义挑战的方式进行。