图书简介
Psychiatry has been subject to major changes in the last 150 years. This book explores the forces that have shaped these changes and how they have impacted on the psychiatric profession in this time. The result is a dynamic discussion about the nature of psychiatric disorders, and a book that is compelling reading.
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Princeton University Library
Preface; Introduction; List of contributors; Part I: Nature of Historical Change in Science; Section 1: Objectivity and Scientific Change; 1 Kenneth S. Kendler: Introduction to Pluralism, Incommensurability, and Scientific Change; 2 Helen Longino: Pluralism, Incommensurability, and Scientific Change; 3 John Dupre: For Objective, Value-Laden, Contextualist Pluralism; Section 2: Change in Psychopathology; 4 Josef Parnas: Introduction to History and Epistemology of Psychopathology; 5 German E Berrios: History and Epistemology of Psychopathology; 6 Helen Longino: Can Hybridity Overcome Dualism?; Section 3: Scientific Disagreement in the Medical Context; 7 Kenneth S. Kendler: Introduction to Expert Disagreement and Medical Authority; 8 Miriam Solomon: Expert Disagreement and Medical Authority; 9 Ian Hacking: Trust, Dissent and Decision Vectors; Section 4: The Social, the Cultural, and Psychiatric Kinds; 10 Kenneth S. Kendler: Introduction to Varieties of Social Constructionism and the Problem of Progress in Psychiatry; 11 Kenneth F. Schaffner and Kathryn Tabb: Varieties of Social Constructionism and the Problem of Progress in Psychiatry; 12 German E. Berrios: The role of cultural configurators in the formation of mental symptoms; Part II: History of Broad Movements/Structures within Psychiatry; Section 5: The Psychiatric History of the Diencephalon; 13 Josef Parnas: Introduction to Biography of a brain structure: studying the diencephalon as an epistemic object; 14 Emilie Bovet: Biography of a brain structure: studying the diencephalon as an epistemic object; 15 Eric J. Engstrom: Some Reflections on Historiographic Strategies for the Neurosciences; Section 6: The History of Psychiatry as Interdisciplinary History; 16 Kenneth S. Kendler: Introduction to On Attitudes Toward Philosophy and Psychology in German Psychiatry, 1867-1917; 17 Eric J. Engstrom: On Attitudes Toward Philosophy and Psychology in German Psychiatry, 1867-1917; 18 Yuji Sato: Interdisciplinarity vs. compartmentalization: an eternal dilemma in psychiatry; Section 7: Psychiatry and Psychoanalysis in the United States; 19 Kenneth S. Kendler: Introduction to The Development of Psychoanalysis in the Context of American Psychiatry; 20 Robert Michels: The Development of Psychoanalysis in the Context of American Psychiatry; 21 Josef Parnas: Decline of psychoanalysis to the advantage of what?; Section 8: The Operational Revolution; 22 Kenneth S. Kendler: Introduction to Psychiatry Made Easy: Operation(al)ism and Some of its Consequences; 23 Josef Parnas and Pierre Bovet: Psychiatry Made Easy: Operation(al)ism and Some of its Consequences; 24 Kenneth F. Schaffner and Kathryn Tabb: Hempel as a Critic of Bridgman’s Operationalism: Lessons for Psychiatry from the History of Science; Section 9: The Evolution of Genetic Explanation in Psychiatry; 25 Kenneth S. Kendler: Introduction to the Nature of Nurture; 26 Eric Turkheimer: The Nature of Nature; 27 Peter Zachar: Is it time for a Copenhagen interpretation in behavioral genetics?; Section 10: Psychiatry and Evolution; 28 Josef Parnas: Introduction to What Can Evolution Tell us About the Healthy Mind?; 29 John Dupre: What Can Evolution Tell us About the Healthy Mind?; 30 Emilie Bovet: What can history and social studies of sciences teach us about evolutionary psychiatry?; Part III: Specific Disorders from an Historical Perspective; Section 11: Schizophrenia and the Dopamine Hypothesis; 31 Josef Parnas: Introduction to Dopamine Hypothesis of Schizophrenia: An Updated Perspective; 32 Kenneth S. Kendler: The Dopamine Hypothesis of Schizophrenia: An Updated Perspective; 33 Miriam Solomon: Why is the Dopamine Hypothesis of Schizophrenia the Only Game in Town?; Section 12: Conceptual status of depression today; 34 Josef Parnas: Introduction to An overview in a bio-psycho-socio-economic context; 35 Yuji Sato: An overview in a bio-psycho-socio-economic context; 36 Eric Turkheimer: What do We Want from A Depression Diagnosis?; Section 13: The Shaping of Autism; 37 Josef Parnas: Introduction to On the Ratio of Science to Activism in the Shaping of Autism; 38 Ian Hacking: On the Ratio of Science to Activism in the Shaping of Autism; 39 Kenneth S. Kendler: The Shaping of Autism and Other Psychiatric Disorders: An Alternative Perspective; Section 14: The decision to include or exclude a diagnosis in psychiatric nosology: The case of premenstrual dysphoric disorder; 40 Josef Parnas: Introduction to A DSM Insiders’ History of Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder; 41 Peter Zachar and Kenneth S. Kendler: A DSM Insiders’ History of Premenstrual Dysphoric Disorder; 42 Robert Michels: The Construction of a Diagnosis is Not a Scientific Issue
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