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A 'Cure' for Character
· Sunday, February 28, 2010
WASHINGTON -- Peter De Vries, America's wittiest novelist, died 17 years ago but his discernment of this country's cultural foibles still amazes. In a 1983 novel, he spotted the tendency of America's therapeutic culture to medicalize character flaws:
"Once terms like identity doubts and midlife crisis become current," De Vries wrote, "the reported cases of them increase by leaps and bounds." And: "Rapid-fire means of communication have brought psychic dilapidation within the reach of the most provincial backwaters, so that large metropolitan centers and educated circles need no longer consider it their exclusive property, nor preen themselves on their special malaises."
Life is about to imitate De Vries' literature, again. The fourth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), psychiatry's encyclopedia of supposed mental "disorders," is being revised. The 16 years since the last revision evidently were prolific in producing new afflictions. The revision may aggravate the confusion of moral categories.
Today's DSM defines "oppositional defiant disorder" as a pattern of "negativistic, defiant, disobedient and hostile behavior toward authority figures." Symptoms include "often loses temper," "often deliberately annoys people" or "is often touchy." DSM omits this symptom: "is a teenager."
This DSM defines as "personality disorders" attributes that once were considered character flaws. "Antisocial personality disorder" is "a pervasive pattern of disregard for ... the rights of others ... callous, cynical ... an inflated and arrogant self-appraisal." "Histrionic personality disorder" is "excessive emotionality and attention-seeking." "Narcissistic personality disorder" involves "grandiosity, need for admiration ... boastful and pretentious." And so on.
If every character blemish or emotional turbulence is a "disorder" akin to a physical disability, legal accommodations are mandatory. Under federal law, "disabilities" include any "mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities"; "mental impairments" include "emotional or mental illness." So there might be a legal entitlement to be a jerk. (See above, "antisocial personality disorder.")
The revised DSM reportedly may include "binge eating disorder" and "hypersexual disorder" ("a great deal of time" devoted to "sexual fantasies and urges" and "planning for and engaging in sexual behavior"). Concerning children, there might be "temper dysregulation disorder with dysphoria."
This last categorization illustrates the serious stakes in the categorization of behaviors. Extremely irritable or aggressive children are frequently diagnosed as bipolar and treated with powerful antipsychotic drugs. This can be a damaging mistake if behavioral modification treatment can mitigate the problem.
Another danger is that childhood eccentricities, sometimes inextricable from creativity, might be labeled "disorders" to be "cured." If 7-year-old Mozart tried composing his concertos today, he might be diagnosed with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and medicated into barren normality.
Furthermore, intellectual chaos can result from medicalizing the assessment of character. Today's therapeutic ethos, which celebrates curing and disparages judging, expresses the liberal disposition to assume that crime and other problematic behaviors reflect social or biological causation. While this absolves the individual of responsibility, it also strips the individual of personhood, and moral dignity.
James Q. Wilson, America's pre-eminent social scientist, has noted how "abuse excuse" threatens the legal system and society's moral equilibrium. Writing in National Affairs quarterly ("The Future of Blame"), Wilson notes that genetics and neuroscience seem to suggest that self-control is more attenuated -- perhaps to the vanishing point -- than our legal and ethical traditions assume.
The part of the brain that stimulates anger and aggression is larger in men than in women, and the part that restrains anger is smaller in men than in women. "Men," Wilson writes, "by no choice of their own, are far more prone to violence and far less capable of self-restraint than women." That does not, however, absolve violent men of blame. As Wilson says, biology and environment interact. And the social environment includes moral assumptions, sometimes codified in law, concerning expectations about our duty to desire what we ought to desire.
It is scientifically sensible to say that all behavior is in some sense caused. But a society that thinks scientific determinism renders personal responsibility a chimera must consider it absurd not only to condemn depravity but also to praise nobility. Such moral derangement can flow from exaggerated notions of what science teaches, or can teach, about the biological and environmental roots of behavior.
Or -- revisers of the DSM, please note -- confusion can flow from the notion that normality is always obvious and normative, meaning preferable. And the notion that deviations from it should be considered "disorders" to be "cured" rather than stigmatized as offenses against valid moral norms.
(c) 2010, Washington Post Writers Group
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MichaelSSEC
"moral assumptions, sometimes codified in law, concerning expectations about our duty to desire what we ought to desire"
Amazing how one little sentence completely refutes so much of Leftist pop psychology. Our duty to desire what we OUGHT to desire. Good stuff!
How ironic is it that the Left keeps lobbying to turn traditional morals -- most of which have served us quite well for 3000 years -- into "out dated obsolete concepts of morality" but substitutes nothingness in their place. It's nihilism. Tear down all that is good, right and successful. Replace it with nothing. Tear down authority, respect, duty, honor, etc. Replace them with "do whatever you want, whatever feels good."
This forces us to reinvent the wheel, over and over again, with each successive generation. It's hard to imagine a stupider way of doing business. Force every generation to rediscover as brand-new concepts the self-evidence fact that some behaviors are better than others, that some activities should be avoided while others should be pursued diligently. How much smarter it would be to do as most people did until the 1950s, adhere to the centuries-old traditions encoded in the Judeo-Christian moral system. The rejection of that system is a fairly recent phenomenon, and it should be noted most carefully that as our society drifted (or was pushed by Liberals) away from these moral intuitions, every negative in society increased. Crime, incivility, poverty, ignorance, illiteracy, immorality, teen pregnancy, divorce, welfare, etc all rose sharply in direct proportion to the extent to which America abandoned its Judeo-Christian heritage.
Why reinvent the wheel when an excellent blueprint for a highly successful society already exists? Can there be a greater foolishness?
Posted February 28, 2010 at 4:39:06 PM
Richard
First, let me state that I have no use for pychobabblers. From where I stand they cause more problems than the cure, and are quick to dole out drugs for those that really have no need to be medicated.
Second;
"This DSM defines as "personality disorders" attributes that once were considered character flaws. "Antisocial personality disorder" is "a pervasive pattern of disregard for ... the rights of others ... callous, cynical ... an inflated and arrogant self-appraisal." "Histrionic personality disorder" is "excessive emotionality and attention-seeking." "Narcissistic personality disorder" involves "grandiosity, need for admiration ... boastful and pretentious. And so on."
Sounds to me that the above describes exactly liberals.
Mike Savage is correct it is indeed a "mental disorder'.
Posted February 28, 2010 at 7:58:35 PM
Marcus
My parents and many others correctly surmised that childhood disorders could be mitigated by the behaviorial modification technique known by its technical name: a good butt wuppin'
My guess is that the liberals didn't recieve nearly enough of this very effective psychological treatment regimen.
Posted March 1, 2010 at 11:50:14 AM