Broken wills and ill beliefs: Szaszianism, expressivism, and the doubly value-laden nature of mental disorder

  • Miguel Núñez de Prado-Gordillo*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Critical psychiatry has recently echoed Szasz’s longstanding concerns about medical understandings of mental distress. According to Szaszianism, the analogy between mental and somatic disorders is illegitimate because the former presuppose psychosocial and ethical norms, whereas the latter merely involve deviations from natural ones. So-called “having-it-both-ways” views have contested that social norms and values play a role in both mental and somatic healthcare, thus rejecting that the influence of socio-normative considerations in mental healthcare compromises the analogy between mental and somatic disorders. This paper has two goals. Firstly, I argue that having-it-both-ways views fail to provide a compelling answer to Szasz’s challenge. The reason is that what is essential to Szasz’s argument is not that mental disorder attributions involve value judgements, but that mental attributions in general do. Mental disorders are thus doubly value-laden and, qua mental, only metaphorically possible. To illustrate this, I construe Szasz’s view and Fulford’s having-it-both-ways approach as endorsing two different kinds of expressivism about mental disorders, pointing out their different implications for the analysis of delusions. Secondly, I argue, against Szaszianism, that Szasz’s rejection of the analogy is relatively irrelevant for discussions about the appropriateness of medicalizing mental distress. Specifically, I draw from socio-normative approaches to the psychopathology/social deviance distinction and mad and neurodiversity literature to argue that a) it is still possible to distinguish social deviance from psychopathology once we reject the analogy; and b) that both medicalizing and normalizing attitudes to mental distress can harmfully wrong people from relevant collectives.
Original languageEnglish
Article number24
Number of pages26
JournalSynthese
Volume203
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Jan 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024, The Author(s).

Funding

This work was supported by the Dutch Research Council (NWO) through a postdoctoral fellowship associated to the VIDI project “Shaping Our Action Space: A Situated Perspective on Self-Control” (VI.Vidi.195.116). It also received partial support from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation through the projects “The Social Roots of Mental Health” (PID2021-126826NA-I00), and “Functional Study of the Clinical Interaction in Patients Diagnosed with Mental Illness” (PSI2016-76551-R), where the author participates as a team member, as well as from the Autonomous University of Madrid through an FPI-UAM Predoctoral Fellowship (2017). I would also like to thank Virginia Ballesteros and Víctor Fernández-Castro for their helpful advice and comments.

FundersFunder number
Autonomous University of Madrid
FPI-UAM
Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk OnderzoekVI.Vidi.195.116
Ministerio de Ciencia e InnovaciónPID2021-126826NA-I00, PSI2016-76551-R

    Keywords

    • Critical psychiatry
    • Delusion
    • Expressivism
    • Mental disorder
    • Philosophy of psychiatry
    • Social normativity

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