The Myth of Mental Illness by Thomas Szasz
 The Myth of Mental Illness

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Introduction
This
classic publication elevated Thomas Szasz into a position of
international renown and controversy. According to Szasz, the concept of
mental illness is fundamentally flawed because it is based on the
premiss that it is caused by nervous system disorders; in particular
brain disorders which manifest themselves via abnormal thought patterns
and behavior. To Thomas Szasz most cases of "mental illness" are routed
within a social context, and are in fact problems of living, and should,
therefore, be recognised as so. The following transcript excerpt
from a lecture Thomas Szasz gave in 2003 provides further insight into
his position on mental illness. Psychiatry and the idea of mental
illness is one of those things, which, in my opinion, got off to a
fundamentally wrong start. Now, as you know, the idea of illness, of
being sick, is as old as mankind. It certainly goes back to ancient
Greece and Rome; they had no idea, no concept such as rehabilitation of
mental illness in fact even Shakespeare doesn’t have such a concept if
you read his work. There is a concept of madness, of something being
wrong, most dramatically expressed in Macbeth but the idea really is a
modern idea. It was a 17th century idea, a contemporary in the uses of
modern scientific thinking, materialistic scientific thinking. Now,
what is the root problem? It’s extremely simple. People have tried to
explain why people do what they do forever and that’s a natural thing.
We do that by looking for the reason why people do what they do. You are
sitting here because you have a reason for wanting to hear me. So, you
have some reason for being here, as I have. This is a skill we use
generally, except when for some reason we decide that the person is
mentally ill. Then we say they are unreasonable, and then we assign
causes to this behaviour. Now, this is a fundamental dichotomy.
Supposing you get Hepatitis and you will turn yellow. Someone could say
that this means something, that the yellow is indicating something, a
sign. But, of course, you are not giving a sign. As Erving
Goffman, who was very sensitive about human communication and language
said, “You are giving off a sign; you are not giving a sign.” Same thing
with a reflex; if you, for example, have a sore throat and you cough –
you are not coughing to attract attention or as a mannerism; you are
doing it involuntarily. And there is a cause for it. So, when you go to
your doctor or physician they are looking for the cause of your illness
or infection. If you break a leg; the cause is you fell over. This is a
scheme they use in psychiatry. So, we say schizophrenia is an illness.
The Article in Full My
aim in this essay is to raise the question "Is there such a thing as
mental illness?" and to argue that there is not. Since the notion of
mental illness is extremely widely used nowadays, inquiry into the ways
in which this term is employed would seem to be especially indicated.
Mental illness, of course, is not literally a "thing" - or physical
object - and hence it can "exist" only in the same sort of way in which
other theoretical concepts exist. Yet, familiar theories are in the
habit of posing, sooner or later - at least to those who come to believe
in them - as "objective truths" (or "facts"). During certain historical
periods, explanatory conceptions such as deities, witches, and
microorganisms appeared not only as theories but as self-evident causes
of a vast number of events. I submit that today mental illness is widely
regarded in a somewhat similar fashion, that is, as the cause of
innumerable diverse happenings. As an antidote to the complacent use of
the notion of mental illness - whether as a self-evident phenomenon,
theory, or cause - let us ask this question: What is meant when it is
asserted that someone is mentally ill? In what follows I shall
describe briefly the main uses to which the concept of mental illness
has been put. I shall argue that this notion has outlived whatever
usefulness it might have had and that it now functions merely as a
convenient myth. MENTAL ILLNESS AS A SIGN OF BRAIN DISEASE The
notion of mental illness derives its main support from such phenomena
as syphilis of the brain or delirious conditions-intoxications, for
instance - in which persons are known to manifest various peculiarities
or disorders of thinking and behavior. Correctly speaking, however,
these are diseases of the brain, not of the mind. According to one
school of thought, all so-called mental illness is of this type. The
assumption is made that some neurological defect, perhaps a very subtle
one, will ultimately be found for all the disorders of thinking and
behavior. Many contemporary psychiatrists, physicians, and other
scientists hold this view. This position implies that people cannot
have troubles - expressed in what are now called "mental illnesses" -
because of differences in personal needs, opinions, social aspirations,
values, and so on. All problems in living are attributed to
physicochemical processes which in due time will be discovered by
medical research. "Mental illnesses" are thus regarded as
basically no different than all other diseases (that is, of the body).
The only difference, in this view, between mental and bodily diseases is
that the former, affecting the brain, manifest themselves by means of
mental symptoms; whereas the latter, affecting other organ systems (for
example, the skin, liver, etc.), manifest themselves by means of
symptoms referable to those parts of the body. This view rests on and
expresses what are, in my opinion, two fundamental errors. In the
first place, what central nervous system symptoms would correspond to a
skin eruption or a fracture? It would not be some emotion or complex
bit of behavior. Rather, it would be blindness or a paralysis of some
part of the body. The crux of the matter is that a disease of the brain,
analogous to a disease of the skin or bone, is a neurological defect,
and not a problem in living. For example, a defect in a person's visual
field may be satisfactorily explained by correlating it with certain
definite lesions in the nervous system. On the other hand, a person's
belief - whether this be a belief in Christianity, in Communism, or in
the idea that his internal organs are "rotting" and that his body is, in
fact, already "dead" - cannot be explained by a defect or disease of
the nervous system. Explanations of this sort of occurrence -- assuming
that one is interested in the belief itself and does not regard it
simply as a "symptom" or expression of something else that is more
interesting - must be sought along different lines. The second
error in regarding complex psycho-social behavior, consisting of
communications about ourselves and the world about us, as mere symptoms
of neurological functioning is epistemological. In other words, it is an
error pertaining not to any mistakes in observation or reasoning, as
such, but rather to the way in which we organize and express our
knowledge. In the present case, the error lies in making a symmetrical
dualism between mental and physical (or bodily) symptoms, a dualism
which is merely a habit of speech and to which no known observations can
be found to correspond. Let us see if this is so. In medical practice,
when we speak of physical disturbances, we mean either signs (for
example, a fever) or symptoms (for example, pain). We speak of mental
symptoms, on the other hand, when we refer to a patient's communications
about himself, others, and the world about him. He might state that he
is Napoleon or that he is being persecuted by the Communists. These
would be considered mental symptoms only if the observer believed that
the patient was not Napoleon or that he was not being persecuted by the
Communists. This makes it apparent that the statement that "X is a
mental symptom" involves rendering a judgment. The judgment entails,
moreover, a covert comparison or matching of the patient's ideas,
concepts, or beliefs with those of the observer and the society in which
they live. The notion of mental symptom is therefore inextricably tied
to the social (including ethical) context in which it is made in much
the same way as the notion of bodily symptom is tied to an anatomical
and genetic context (Szasz, 1957a, 1957b). To sum up what has been
said thus far: I have tried to show that for those who regard mental
symptoms as signs of brain disease, the concept of mental illness is
unnecessary and misleading. For what they mean is that people so
labeled suffer from diseases of the brain; and, if that is what they
mean, it would seem better for the sake of clarity to say that and not
something else. MENTAL ILLNESS AS A NAME FOR PROBLEMS IN LIVING The
term "mental illness" is widely used to describe something which is
very different than a disease of the brain. Many people today take it
for granted that living is an arduous process. Its hardship for modern
man, moreover, derives not so much from a struggle for biological
survival as from the stresses and strains inherent in the social
intercourse of complex human personalities. In this context, the notion
of mental illness is used to identify or describe some feature of an
individual's so-called personality. Mental illness - as a deformity of
the personality, so to speak - is then regarded as the cause of the
human disharmony. It is implicit in this view that social intercourse
between people is regarded as something inherently harmonious, its
disturbance being due solely to the presence of "mental illness" in many
people. This is obviously fallacious reasoning, for it makes the
abstraction "mental illness" into a cause, even though this abstraction
was created in the first place to serve only as a shorthand expression
for certain types of human behavior. It now becomes necessary to ask:
"What hinds of behavior are regarded as indicative of mental illness,
and by whom?" The concept of illness, whether bodily or mental,
implies deviation from some clearly defined norm. In the case of
physical illness, the norm is the structural and functional integrity of
the human body. Thus, although the desirability of physical health, as
such, is an ethical value, what health is can be stated in anatomical
and physiological terms. What is the norm deviation from which is
regarded as mental illness? This question cannot be easily answered.
But whatever this norm might be, we can be certain of only one thing:
namely, that it is a norm that must be stated in terms of psycho-social,
ethical, and legal concepts. For example, notions such as "excessive
repression" or "acting out an unconscious impulse" illustrate the use of
psychological concepts for judging (so-called) mental health and
illness. The idea that chronic hostility, vengefulness, or divorce are
indicative of mental illness would be illustrations of the use of
ethical norms (that is, the desirability of love, kindness, and a stable
marriage relationship). Finally, the widespread psychiatric opinion
that only a mentally ill person would commit homicide illustrates the
use of a legal concept as a norm of mental health. The norm from which
deviation is measured whenever one speaks of a mental illness is a
psycho-social and ethical one. Yet, the remedy is sought in terms of
medical measures which - it is hoped and assumed - are free from wide
differences of ethical value. The definition of the disorder and the
terms in which its remedy are sought are therefore at serious odds with
one another. The practical significance of this covert conflict between
the alleged nature of the defect and the remedy can hardly be
exaggerated. Having identified the norms used to measure
deviations in cases of mental illness, we will now turn to the question:
"Who defines the norms and hence the deviation?" Two basic answers may
be offered: (a) It may be the person himself (that is, the patient) who
decides that he deviates from a norm. For example, an artist may believe
that he suffers from a work inhibition; and he may implement this
conclusion by seeking help for himself from a psychotherapist. (b) It
may be someone other than the patient who decides that the latter is
deviant (for example, relatives, physicians, legal authorities, society
generally, etc.). In such a case a psychiatrist may be hired by others
to do something to the patient in order to correct the deviation. These
considerations underscore the importance of asking the question "Whose
agent is the psychiatrist?" and of giving a candid answer to it (Szasz,
1956, 1958). The psychiatrist (psychologist or nonmedical
psychotherapist), it now develops, may be the agent of the patient, of
the relatives, of the school, of the military services, of a business
organization, of a court of law, and so forth. In speaking of the
psychiatrist as the agent of these persons or organizations, it is not
implied that his values concerning norms, or his ideas and aims
concerning the proper nature of remedial action, need to coincide
exactly with those of his employer. For example, a patient in individual
psychotherapy may believe that his salvation lies in a new marriage;
his psychotherapist need not share this hypothesis. As the patient's
agent, however, he must abstain from bringing social or legal force to
bear on the patient which would prevent him from putting his beliefs
into action. If his contract is with the patient, the psychiatrist
(psychotherapist) may disagree with him or stop his treatment; but he
cannot engage others to obstruct the patient's aspirations. Similarly,
if a psychiatrist is engaged by a court to determine the sanity of a
criminal, he need not fully share the legal authorities' values and
intentions in regard to the criminal and the means available for dealing
with him. But the psychiatrist is expressly barred from stating, for
example, that it is not the criminal who is "insane" but the men who
wrote the law on the basis of which the very actions that are being
judged are regarded as "criminal." Such an opinion could be voiced, of
course, but not in a courtroom, and not by a psychiatrist who makes it
his practice to assist the court in performing its daily work. To
recapitulate: In actual contemporary social usage, the finding of a
mental illness is made by establishing a deviance in behavior from
certain psychosocial, ethical, or legal norms. The judgment may be
made, as in medicine, by the patient, the physician (psychiatrist), or
others. Remedial action, finally, tends to be sought in a therapeutic -
or covertly medical - framework, thus creating a situation in which
psychosocial, ethical, and/or legal deviations are claimed to be
correctible by (so-called) medical action. Since medical action is
designed to correct only medical deviations, it seems logically absurd
to expect that it will help solve problems whose very existence had been
defined and established on nonmedical grounds. I think that these
considerations may be fruitfully applied to the present use of
tranquilizers and, more generally, to what might be expected of drugs of
whatever type in regard to the amelioration or solution of problems in
human living. THE ROLE OF ETHICS IN PSYCHIATRY Anything
that people do - in contrast to things that happen to them (Peters,
1958) - takes place in a context of value. In this broad sense, no human
activity is devoid of ethical implications. When the values underlying
certain activities are widely shared, those who participate in their
pursuit may lose sight of them altogether. The discipline of medicine,
both as a pure science (for example, research) and as a technology (for
example, therapy), contains many ethical considerations and judgments.
Unfortunately, these are often denied, minimized, or merely kept out of
focus; for the ideal of the medical profession as well as of the people
whom it serves seems to be having a system of medicine (allegedly) free
of ethical value. This sentimental notion is expressed by such things as
the doctor's willingness to treat and help patients irrespective of
their religious or political beliefs, whether they are rich or poor,
etc. While there may be some grounds for this belief - albeit it is a
view that is not impressively true even in these regards - the fact
remains that ethical considerations encompass a vast range of human
affairs. By making the practice of medicine neutral in regard to some
specific issues of value need not, and cannot, mean that it can be kept
free from all such values. The practice of medicine is intimately tied
to ethics; and the first thing that we must do, it seems to me, is to
try to make this clear and explicit. I shall let this matter rest here,
for it does not concern us specifically in this essay, Lest there be any
vagueness, however, about how or where ethics and medicine meet, let me
remind the reader of such issues as birth control, abortion, suicide,
and euthanasia as only a few of the major areas of current ethicomedical
controversy. Psychiatry, I submit, is very much more intimately
tied to problems of ethics than is medicine. I use the word "psychiatry"
here to refer to that contemporary discipline which is concerned with
problems in living (and not with diseases of the brain, which are
problems for neurology). Problems in human relations can be analyzed,
interpreted, and given meaning only within given social and ethical
contexts. Accordingly, it does make a difference - arguments to the
contrary notwithstanding - what the psychiatrist's socioethical
orientations happen to be; for these will influence his ideas on what is
wrong with the patient, what deserves comment or interpretation, in
what possible directions change might be desirable, and so forth. Even
in medicine proper, these factors play a role, as for instance, in the
divergent orientations which physicians, depending on their religious
affiliations, have toward such things as birth control and therapeutic
abortion. Can anyone really believe that a psychotherapist's ideas
concerning religious belief, slavery, or other similar issues play no
role in his practical work? If they do make a difference, what are we to
infer from it? Does it not seem reasonable that we ought to have
different psychiatric therapies - each, expressly recognized for the
ethical positions which they embody - for, say, Catholics and Jews,
religious persons and agnostics, democrats and communists, white
supremacists and Negroes, and so on? Indeed, if we look at how
psychiatry is actually practiced today (especially in the United
States), we find that people do seek psychiatric help in accordance with
their social status and ethical beliefs (Hollingshead & Redlich,
1958). This should really not surprise us more than being told that
practicing Catholics rarely frequent birth control clinics. The
foregoing position which holds that contemporary psychotherapists deal
with problems in living, rather than with mental illnesses and their
cures, stands in opposition to a currently prevalent claim, according to
which mental illness is just as "real" and "objective" as bodily
illness. This is a confusing claim since it is never known exactly what
is meant by such words as "real" and "objective." I suspect, however,
that what is intended by the proponents of this view is to create the
idea in the popular mind that mental illness is some sort of disease
entity, like an infection or a malignancy. If this were true, one could
catch or get a "mental illness," one might have or harbor it, one might
transmit it to others, and finally one could get rid of it. In my
opinion, there is not a shred of evidence to support this idea. To the
contrary, all the evidence is the other way and supports the view that
what people now call mental illnesses are for the most part
communications expressing unacceptable ideas, often framed, moreover, in
an unusual idiom. The scope of this essay allows me to do no more than
mention this alternative theoretical approach to this problem (Szasz,
1957c). This is not the place to consider in detail the
similarities and differences between bodily and mental illnesses. It
shall suffice for us here to emphasize only one important difference
between them: namely, that whereas bodily disease refers to public,
physicochemical occurrences, the notion of mental illness is used to
codify relatively more private, sociopsychological happenings of which
the observer (diagnostician) forms a part. In other words, the
psychiatrist does not stand apart from what he observes, but is, in
Harry Stack Sullivan's apt words, a "participant observer." This means
that he is committed to some picture of what he considers reality - and
to what he thinks society considers reality - and he observes and judges
the patient's behavior in the light of these considerations. This
touches on our earlier observation that the notion of mental symptom
itself implies a comparison between observer and observed, psychiatrist
and patient. This is so obvious that I may be charged with belaboring
trivialities. Let me therefore say once more that my aim in presenting
this argument was expressly to criticize and counter a prevailing
contemporary tendency to deny the moral aspects of psychiatry (and
psychotherapy) and to substitute for them allegedly value-free medical
considerations. Psychotherapy, for example, is being widely practiced
as though it entailed nothing other than restoring the patient from a
state of mental sickness to one of mental health. While it is generally
accepted that mental illness has something to do with man's social (or
interpersonal) relations, it is paradoxically maintained that problems
of values (that is, of ethics) do not arise in this process. [1] Yet, in
one sense, much of psychotherapy may revolve around nothing other than
the elucidation and weighing of goals and values - many of which may be
mutually contradictory - and the means whereby they might best be
harmonized, realized, or relinquished. The diversity of human
values and the methods by means of which they may be realized is so
vast, and many of them remain so unacknowledged, that they cannot fail
but lead to conflicts in human relations. Indeed, to say that human
relations at all levels - from mother to child, through husband and
wife, to nation and nation - are fraught with stress, strain, and
disharmony is, once again, making the obvious explicit. Yet, what may be
obvious may be also poorly understood. This I think is the case here.
For it seems to me that - at least in our scientific theories of
behavior - we have failed to accept the simple fact that human relations
are inherently fraught with difficulties and that to make them even
relatively harmonious requires much patience and hard work. I submit
that the idea of mental illness is now being put to work to obscure
certain difficulties which at present may be inherent - not that they
need be unmodifiable - in the social intercourse of persons. If this is
true, the concept functions as a disguise; for instead of calling
attention to conflicting human needs, aspirations, and values, the
notion of mental illness provides an amoral and impersonal "thing" (an
"illness") as an explanation for problems in living (Szasz, 1959). We
may recall in this connection that not so long ago it was devils and
witches who were held responsible for men's problems in social living.
The belief in mental illness, as something other than man's trouble in
getting along with his fellow man, is the proper heir to the belief in
demonology and witchcraft. Mental illness exists or is "real" in exactly
the same sense in which witches existed or were "real." CHOICE, RESPONSIBILITY, AND PSYCHIATRY While
I have argued that mental illnesses do not exist, I obviously did not
imply that the social and psychological occurrences to which this label
is currently being attached also do not exist. Like the personal and
social troubles which people had in the Middle Ages, they are real
enough. It is the labels we give them that concerns us and, having
labelled them, what we do about them. While I cannot go into the
ramified implications of this problem here, it is worth noting that a
demonologic conception of problems in living gave rise to therapy along
theological lines. Today, a belief in mental illness implies - nay,
requires - therapy along medical or psychotherapeutic lines. What
is implied in the line of thought set forth here is something quite
different. I do not intend to offer a new conception of "psychiatric
illness" nor a new form of "therapy." My aim is more modest and yet
also more ambitious. It is to suggest that the phenomena now called
mental illnesses be looked at afresh and more simple, that they be
removed from the category of illness, and that they be regarded as the
expressions of man's struggle with the problem of how he should live.
The last mentioned problem is obviously a vast one, its enormity
reflecting not only man's inability to cope with his environment, but
even more his increasing self-reflectiveness. By problems in
living, then, I refer to that truly explosive chain reaction which began
with man's fall from divine grace by partaking of the fruit of the tree
of knowledge. Man's awareness of himself and of the world about him
seems to be a steadily expanding one, bringing in its wake an ever
large; burden of understanding (an expression borrowed from Susanne
Langer, 1953). This burden, then, is to be expected and must not be
misinterpreted. Our only rational means for lightening it is more
understanding, and appropriate action based on such understanding. The
main alternative lies in acting as though the burden were not what in
fact we perceive it to be and taking refuge in an outmoded theological
view of man. In the latter view, man does not fashion his life and much
of his world about him, but merely lives out his fate in a world created
by superior beings. This may logically lead to pleading
nonresponsibility in the face of seemingly unfathomable problems and
difficulties. Yet, if man fails to take increasing responsibility for
his actions, individually as well as collectively, it seems unlikely
that some higher power or being would assume this task and carry this
burden for him. Moreover, this seems hardly the proper time in human
history for obscuring the issue of man's responsibility for his actions
by hiding it behind the skirt of an all-explaining conception of mental
illness. CONCLUSIONS I have tried to show that the
notion of mental illness has outlived whatever usefulness it might have
had and that it now functions merely as a convenient myth. As such, it
is a true heir to religious myths in general, and to the belief in
witchcraft in particular; the role of all these belief-systems was to
act as social tranquilizers, thus encouraging the hope that mastery of
certain specific problems may be achieved by means of substitutive
(symbolic-magical) operations. The notion of mental illness thus serves
mainly to obscure the everyday fact that life for most people is a
continuous struggle, not for biological survival, but for a "place in
the sun," "peace of mind," or some other human value. For man aware of
himself and of the world about him, once the needs for preserving the
body (and perhaps the race) are more or less satisfied, the problem
arises as to what he should do with himself. Sustained adherence to the
myth of mental illness allows people to avoid facing this problem,
believing that mental health, conceived as the absence of mental
illness, automatically insures the making of right and safe choices in
one's conduct of life. But the facts are all the other way. It is the
making of good choices in life that others regard, retrospectively, as
good mental health! The myth of mental illness encourages us,
moreover, to believe in its logical corollary: that social intercourse
would be harmonious, satisfying, and the secure basis of a "good life"
were it not for the disrupting influences of mental illness or
"psychopathology." The potentiality for universal human happiness, in
this form at least, seems to me but another example of the
I-wish-it-were-true type of fantasy. I do believe that human happiness
or well-being on a hitherto unimaginably large scale, and not just for a
select few, is possible. This goal could be achieved, however, only at
the cost of many men, and not just a few being willing and able to
tackle their personal, social, and ethical conflicts. This means having
the courage and integrity to forego waging battles on false fronts,
finding solutions for substitute problems - for instance, fighting the
battle of stomach acid and chronic fatigue instead of facing up to a
marital conflict. Our adversaries are not demons, witches, fate,
or mental illness. We have no enemy whom we can fight, exorcise, or
dispel by "cure." What we do have are problems in living - whether these
be biologic, economic, political, or sociopsychological. In this essay I
was concerned only with problems belonging in the last mentioned
category, and within this group mainly with those pertaining to moral
values. The field to which modern psychiatry addresses itself is vast,
and I made no effort to encompass it all. My argument was limited to the
proposition that mental illness is a myth, whose function it is to
disguise and thus render more palatable the bitter pill of moral
conflicts in human relations. REFERENCES HOLLINGSHEAD, A. B., & REDLICB, F. C. Social class and mental illness. New York: Wiley, 1958. JONES, E. The life and work of Sigmund Freud. Vol. III. New York: Basic Books, 1957. LANCER, S. R. Philosophy in a new hey. New York: Mentor Books, 1953. PETERS, R. S. The concept of motivation. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1958. SZASZ, T. S. Malingering: "Diagnosis" or social condemnation? AMA Arch Neurol. Psychiat., 1956, 76, 432-443. SZASZ, T. S. Pain and pleasure: A study of bodily-feelings. New York: Basic Books, 1957. (a) SZASZ,
T. S. The problem of psychiatric nosology: A contribution to a
situational analysis of psychiatric operations. Amer. J. Psychiat,
1957, 114, 405-413. (b) SZASZ, T. S. On the theory of psychoanalytic treatment. Int. J. Psycho-Anal., 1957, 38, 166-182. (c) SZASZ, T. S. Psychiatry, ethics and the criminal law. Columbia law Rev., 1958, 58, 183-198. SZASZ, T. S. Moral conflict and psychiatry, Yale Rev., 1959, in press. FOOTNOTE [1]
Freud went so far as to say that: "I consider ethics to be taken for
granted. Actually I have never done a mean thing" (Jones, 1957, p.
247). This surely is a strange thing to say for someone who has studied
man as a social being as closely as did Freud. I mention it here to
show how the notion of "illness" (in the case of psychoanalysis,
"psychopathology," or "mental illness") was used by Freud - and by most
of his followers - as a means for classifying certain forms of human
behavior as falling within the scope of medicine, and hence (by fiat)
outside that of ethics!
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