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Originally published in 1975, this book examines the various types of psychological disturbance, shows how they have come to be regarded as illnesses, and examines critically the notion of psychiatric diagnosis. It describes how clinical psychology has grown up within psychiatry to support a conceptual system antithetical to it.
The author goes on to describe the theories and therapies that do not adhere particularly to the notion of mental illness. Today it can be enjoyed in its historical perspective.
List of contents
Introduction. Part 1: The Medical Approach to Psychological Problems 1. Classification in Psychiatry 2. Problems of Classification 3. The Concept of Mental Illness 4. The Nature of Clinical Psychology Part 2: Psychosocial Approaches to Psychiatric Disorders 5. Man and His Dynamic Unconscious 6. Man and His Inner Self 7. Man and His Behaviour 8. Man and His Conceptual System. Conclusions. References and Name Index. Subject Index.
About the author
Dougal Mackay
Summary
Originally published in 1975, this book examines the various types of psychological disturbance, shows how they have come to be regarded as illnesses, and examines critically the notion of psychiatric diagnosis. It describes how clinical psychology has grown up within psychiatry to support a conceptual system antithetical to it.
The author goes on to describe the theories and therapies that do not adhere particularly to the notion of mental illness. Today it can be enjoyed in its historical perspective.