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Philosophical Perspectives on Technology and Psychiatry

Philosophical Perspectives on Technology and Psychiatry

9780199207428
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Description
Our lives are dominated by technology. We live with and through the achievements of technology. What is true of the rest of life is of course true of medicine. Many of us owe our existence and our continued vigour to some achievement of medical technology. And what is true in a major way of general medicine is to a significant degree true of psychiatry. Prozac has long since arrived, and in its wake an ever-growing armamentarium of new psychotropics; beyond that, neurosciencepromises ever more technological advances for the field.However, the effect of technology on the field of psychiatry remains highly ambiguous. On the one hand there are the achievements, both in the science and practice of psychiatry; on the other hand technologys influence on the field threatens its identity as a humanistic practice. In this ambiguity psychiatry is not unique - major thinkers have for a long time been highly ambivalent and concerned about the technological order that now defines modern society. For the future, the danger is thatthe psychiatrically real becomes that which can be seen, the symptom, and especially that which can be measured. Disorders and treatments might become reduced to what can be defined by diagnostic criteria and what can be mapped out on a scale. This book exams how technology has come to influence and drive psychiatry forward, and considers at just what cost these developments have been made. It includes a range of stimulating and thought-provoking chapters from a range of psychiatrists and philosophers.
Product Details
OUP Oxford
83598
9780199207428
9780199207428

Data sheet

Publication date
2008
Issue number
1
Cover
paperback
Pages count
336
Dimensions (mm)
156 x 232
Weight (g)
513
  • Introduction; Part 1 - Technical Reason in Psychiatry; the instrument metaphor, hyponarrativity, and the generic physician; Technoloigcal rationality in psychiatry: immanent critique, critical theory, and a pragmatist alternative; Technological reason and regulation of emotion; Part 2 - Critical Approaches to TEchnology in Psychiatry; Technology, aesthetic explanation, and psychoanalysis; Focusing the lenses of feminist theories to reflect on technology and psychiatry; The critical theory of psychopharmacology: the work of David Healy and beyond; Towards a post-technological information theory; Part 3 - Technology and Psychiatric Disorders; Technology and mental disorders: a clinical probe into the differential impact on individuals; Frontal fatigue: how technology may contribute to mental illness; Bored to tears? Depression and Heideggrs concepts of profound boredom: a postpsychiatry contribution; Part 4 - Technological Instruments; Psychiatric rehabilitation and the notion of technology in psychiatry; Drugs, not hugs: antidepressant medication trials and suicidality in children - a case history in the philosophy of science as an argument for the neeed for improved technology in psychiatry; Philosophical considerations of an internet-enabled telephone and computer psychiatric symptom monitoring system: maintaining thebalance between subjectivity and objectivity in research; The assessment of emotional awareness: can technology make a contribution?; Part 5 - Ethical Issues in Technology and Psychiatry; Thinking about the repair manual: technique and technology in psychiatry; Beyond repugnance: human enhancement and the Presidents Council on Bioethics; The reflectively anxious and depressed; psychotropics and lives worth living;
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