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Mundus vult decipi: the world wants to be deceived. The truth
is too complex and frightening; the taste for the truth is an
acquired taste that few people acquire. |
Not all deceptions are palatable. Untruths are too easy to
come by, too quickly exploded, too cheap and ephemeral to give
lasting comfort. Mundus vult decipi; but there is a hierarchy
of deceptions. |
On a higher level we find fictions that men eagerly
believe, regardless of the evidence, because they gratify some
wish. |
Near the top of the ladder we encounter curious
mixtures of untruth and truth that exert a lasting fascination
on the intellectual community. |
What cannot, on the face of it, be wholly true,
although it is plain that there is some truth in it, evokes
more discussion and dispute, divergent exegesis and attempts
at emendations than what has been stated very carefully, without
exaggeration or onesidedness. |
Mundus vult decipi: The world winks at dishonesty.
The world does not call it dishonesty. |
Once a few respected men have fortified a brazen
claim with their prestige, it becomes a cliche that gets repeated
endlessly as if it were self-evident. Any protest is regarded
as a heresy that shows how those who utter it do not belong:
arguments are not met on their merits; instead one rehearses
a few illustrious names and possible deigns to contrast them
with some horrible examples. |
I And You: A Prologue
Walter Kaufman
The word science seems to be used interchangeably
in general conversation in at least three quite distinct and nonequivalent
ways:
- A set of facts and a set of theories that explain the facts.
- A particular approach, the scientific method.
- Whatevers being done by institutions carrying on scientific
activity.
As a general rule, the nonscientific public tends to opt for the
third interpretation. If people describe themselves as scientist,
what they do must be scientific. On the other hand, nonscientific
people will sometimes talk about facts and theories as being scientific
and then go on to talk about their own theory of human behavior.
Such fundamental misunderstanding about what constitutes scientific
activities gives rise to an array of subsidiary misperceptions about
the goals of science and the way scientist go about their business
of trying to achieve these goals. One of the greatest difficulties
is the one that suggests that scientific knowledge is true/false
depending upon your own attitudes and perspectives.
Every human undertaking must somehow pick and choose what aspects
to ignore in order to concentrate on other aspects of the world.
This selection behavior happens with the individual central nervous
system. Individual people therefore do not address all aspects of
their environment, but tend to decide what is important based upon
their experiences. When those experiences involve people significant
in their lives, the construct is carried to cultures. Some cultures
focus on one aspect and other cultures on other aspects of event
phenomenon. It follows therefore that some might become more interested
in spiritual perspective and some in factual perspectives. It is
not that one perspective is necessarily better than the other, since
both are part of the human experience; but they are different points
of view. And these points of view lead to differing thoughts [beliefs],
emotions [feelings] and actions. The balance between human spirituality
and science is an important part of finding an appropriate means
to manage human behavior, whether such management is simply to get
the best out of people in productive work or to focus on helping
people learn to manage their own lives. Certainly difficulty occurs
when beliefs are espoused as facts; and facts are confused with
beliefs. Therefore the appropriate development of vocabulary and
concepts in regard to science and faith has some merit in an exploration
of appropriate action.
The beginnings of science are usually attributed to Aristotle.
Prior to his deductive procedure for uncovering the truth, the traditional
means for structuring experience was the myth, a term deriving from
the Greek mythos, meaning word in the sense that it is a definitive
statement on the subject. To give someone the word, even today is
to show them the ropes or tell them how events and incidents occur
within the context of this environment. A myth, then was an authoritative
account of the facts that was not to be questioned, no matter how
strange it may seem. Myths need be neither true nor false, just
useful constructs for explaining the nature of an experience. Such
myths were the common knowledge of various cultures and helped naive
people understand the nature of the world. One of the main uses
of myths was to provide an explanation of how real world events
work. In everyday speech an explanation is usually taken to be the
answer to a question that begins Why? Answers inevitably begin with
Because, and the question and answer together constitute what we
generally call a statement of cause and effect. People using myths
made no pretensions to truth, rather they were stating this is the
way we do things around here. It is somehow comforting at times
of crisis to have a belief system that provides some explanation
for what would otherwise seem a capricious event.
The opposite side of the reality coin from mythos is logos, the
Greek term for an account whose truth can be demonstrated and debated.
It is this kind of truth that Aristotle was trying to grasp when
he developed logos into logic by use of the process of deduction.
Rather than address the questions of life experience based on local
perspectives, Aristotles procedure for uncovering truth was
to postulate premises and then use the now familiar rules of logical
deduction to derive the consequences implicit in the premises. The
classical example of this procedure is:
Premise I: All men are mortal.
Premise II. Socrates is a man.
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Conclusion: Socrates is mortal.
It is important to note that nothing is said about the actual truth
or falsity of the premises. If, for example, all men are not mortal;
or Socrates is not a man; the conclusion may also be false. Physical
reality and truth play no role in the deductive method; the premises
are assumed to be true, with the conclusion following from this
assumption. This method of seeking truth, which was an epistemology
in which one inferred specific instances [conclusions] from general
observations [premises], was predicated upon principles which were
potentially myth in themselves. Thus if the premise that Socrates
is a man was a myth, then the conclusions were also mythical.
It was not until the work of Francis Bacon in the seventeenth century
that the method was challenged. Bacon suggested turning the situation
around by trying to infer general instances from specific observations.
Thus followed the principle of induction, whereby conclusions about
future events are drawn on the basis of repeated past observations.
In Bacons view, if we observe the Sun rising in the east for
fifty consecutive days, then we can predict that it will rise in
the east on day 51. And the longer we observe such regular behavior,
the more confidently we can speak about its continuation.
On the one hand, it is satisfying to have a method that takes into
account what nature is actually doing; on the other hand, why should
such a procedure provide reliable information about the way things
work? On what grounds should I believe that just because my pen
has always dropped to the floor when it rolled off the desk, that
it will the next time? The short answer is that there is absolutely
no justification at all. This is the Problem of Induction.
Galileo helped by contributing a refinement to the Bacon methodology
by instituting the notion of controlled experiment. Galileo said
that if you have a theory about how some phenomenon works, you must
construct an experiment in which all the variables except the one
youre interested in are controllable. It seems that he interjected
two new factors: 1) that one must have some notion [hypothesis]
about how things work and that you can test that notion [hypothesis]
through a 2) controlled process which will test the notion.
The idea of creating a hypothesis about how things work has significant
importance in being able to perceive what is happening. It seems,
as suggested by Albert Einstein [1949], that the human mind has
first to construct forms independently before we can find them in
things ...knowledge cannot spring from experience alone, but only
from a comparison of the inventions of the intellect with observed
facts. Isolated facts are useless curiosities until they are put
together with other facts into some kind of pattern. Thus the importance
of creating a theory about how things work is an important aspect
of being able to see whether it happens.
Today, the word theory usually has a precise meaning in science,
quite different from its everyday use. A theory is not a vague idea
or conjecture or argument, but a well defined set of rules from
which predictions can be made for a variety of phenomena. The goal
of the process of explanation in science is to find the theory that
incorporates and relates what is known in a manner which can used
to accurately predict future events. The development of theory is
usually based upon the results of knowledge built upon prior experience,
much of which comes from experimentation and conversely, the verification
of the power of a theory is based on rigorous experimentation under
controlled conditions and in life.
Neither theory nor experiment alone can tell us how to understand
the real world. Experiments without a theory are difficult to interpret
and hard to relate to other experiments: theory without experimentation
is just conjecture.
Normally theories are formulated to explain the behavior of some
set of objects, of some sizes, properties, etc.. Theories become
established as correct that is, as describing the real world - by
a combination of experimental tests and explanatory power. An acceptable
theory must not have any conceptual gaps no need for a miracle to
bridge a crevice.
With the ideas of deduction, induction, observation and experiment
welded together, the stage is now set to examine models
of behavior management. In any area of science there are initially
a lot of models proposed by scientist trying to describe what is
observed. Models are attempts to provide partial explanations for
phenomena, and they guide research. A model in science is a set
of assumptions and rules that incorporates a certain amount of what
is known and aims to relate what it describes to some new experimental
or theoretical results. A model allows us to make predictions with
one of three results possible. A model can uniquely predict a value
for something we know and get right, which should increase our confidence
in the model. It may get it wrong, in which case the model must
be modified or discarded. Or it may lead to a range of values some
of which prove to be right and others wrong. That result may be
encouraging and lead us to work to improve the model.
At a certain, not precisely defined, stage the model becomes accepted
as a theory [or else people lose interest in it, perhaps because
some of its implications are wrong]. At some stage scientist start
calling the most successful model the standard model just to give
it a name. If there were a standard model in the management
of peoples behavior, it would be the medical model.
Actually, this theory of people management is a sub-category of
an expert model in which the expert is a medical doctor.
Until recently, the expert model of managing people
in employment was also an expert model in which the
expert was the manager. In this arena, however, business
is losing confidence in the expert model. This was caused by the
crisis of market loss to Japanese companies which used a different
model based on different theories. While similar erosion of confidence
should be taking place in the medical model for people
with atypical behaviors, there is no loss or crisis in a monopolistic
field to drive the need for change. Further, the people who are
unhappy with the model are crazy and therefore can be ignored. Thus
continued failure can be adequately dealt with by seeking more money.
Though there are many ways to demonstrate things are false, a scientific
approach to understanding the natural world can never prove an interpretation
is true. We cannot suggest therefore that a cognitive behavior model
is true. Nor can we suggest that it is the best model possible.
Science is not in the business of supplying ultimate explanations.
Rather, it is intent upon finding the best explanation of phenomena
and the best ability to predict future events that is available
at the moment. Thus, every scientific law or theory is subject to
modification; there are no universal, absolute, unchangeable truths
in science.
What we are advancing therefore is a model, based upon cognitive
behavioral theories, based on social learning concepts which have
proven over time to be far superior to the medical model based upon
biomedical theories [pathology such as brain atrophy, chemical imbalance,
genetic programming] and psychodynamic theories [pathological appetites],
which lead to making decisions in the best interest of the person
with problems in living.
The casual observer might suggest that science supports the medical
model and to the degree of public acclaim, this is so. Scientific
America, for example, supposedly a scientific magazine published
by the American Academy of Science, consistently runs articles in
which pathologies are identified as causal without any scientific
merit other than the claim that the person writing the article or
making the claim is a scientist. Upon examination, these claims
are patently insupportable and become little more than myths. Thus
medical doctors [psychiatrists] consistently support the ideal that
schizophrenia is caused by a chemical imbalance and that the only
remediation is the use of powerful toxic drugs. Yet there is no
scientific evidence to support the claim, except that the use of
the drugs diminish the behaviors of concern. As Paulos suggests
in his book Innumeracy while talking about logic, this is the equivalent
of suggesting that headaches are caused by the absence of aspirin
since the use of that drug eases the pain.
The Harvard Medical Journal published in the early 90s an article
stating that brain atrophy was the cause of schizophrenia because
fifteen of the sixteen brains they had examined were smaller than
normal. Of course, there needed to be explanation for the sixteenth,
but none occurred. Without some way to bridge this crevice, it is
obvious that schizophrenia cannot be caused by brain atrophy since
it occurs without it. It might also be noted that a) psychotropic
drugs work by destroying brain cells; b) doctors generally do not
believe that people with schizophrenia can be helped without such
drugs; and, therefore the likelihood of brain atrophy being caused
by the cure is a significant possibility.
Studies of identical twins suggest that in fully fifty percent
of twins studied, both are diagnosed with schizophrenia despite
being raised apart. This is offered as proof of genetic heritage
as the cause of the disease. It demonstrates, of course, just the
opposite. If the genetic heritage is identical and only fifty percent
are so diagnosed, it must be environmental. A person with certain
genetic propensities brought up in an appropriate environment does
not contract the disease.
Finally, there is the fascination of the cause and effect aspect
of the chemical process. If you are truly frightened, scientists
will tell you that your adrenaline levels will increase dramatically.
Thus chemically, adrenaline is a requisite part of fear. However,
this leaves a question as to whether it is a cause of fear or an
effect of fear. From the standpoint of science this is an important
question as it sets the stage for how one would address issues of
fear. If, for example, increased adrenaline is the cause of fear,
one could consider making fearless soldiers or athletes by blocking
the adrenaline. If, on the other hand, increased adrenaline is an
effect of fear, such blocking could be quite harmful and not meet
the expectations.
This question of cause and effect, to the best of my knowledge,
has never been asked in relationship to dopamine. If, as the medical
experts say, people with schizophrenia have excess dopamine and
the psychotropic drugs are required to block the dopamine receptors,
they are suggesting that dopamine is a cause. But is it? We know
that the effects of these psychotropic drugs are excessively harmful,
working to dull the senses and thus the behavior through destruction
of brain cells, but have we even endeavored to scientifically pursue
this anomaly?
Regardless of these questions, the fact is that trial after trial
has not demonstrated any value for either biomedical nor psychodynamic,
which are essentially psuedobiomedical approaches. No value unless
cognitive and behavioral therapies are included as psychodynamic
interventions instead of being properly labeled . In this case,
the positive effects of the cognitive and behavioral interventions
cause the overall psychodynamic category to appear to work. Yet
despite this evidence, such approaches continue to prevail as predominant
interventions.
Meanwhile. the conceptual elements of their theoretical base create
other problems. If, for example, a pathology, real or otherwise,
is causing a person to behave in ways that are harmful to themselves
and others; it seems quite proper to control that person through
medication or incarceration or both. Control is an important aspect
of the medical model and leads to discussions in regard to restrictions,
and includes terms such as compliance and resistance. Such restrictions
and control often happen without any evidence of actual harm to
self and others, but on a on a predictive basis. This is of course
illegal in this country, but the power of science is at work here.
The fact that psychiatrists and pharmaceutical companies make a
great deal of money should not be lost on anyone in the process
of examination.
But more importantly the expert [psychiatrist] seems perfectly
capable of making predictive decisions in regard to constraint,
but generally chooses to publicly deny responsibility for making
decisions in regard to freedom. Thus the ability to predict violence
to self an others is limited only to control; when a person who
is set free commits a violent act, there is no claim of responsibility.
There is much to be lost by a collapse of the medical model. Psychiatrists,
who as a group have given up their counseling credentials, would
probably no longer have a place to work. Pharmaceutical companies
would lose a huge market. There is substantial reason for the guild
protection which psychiatrist have had built into the regulations
of every public mental health system in the world. The regulations
are clear, no mental health program can be operated without the
direct supervision of a board certified psychiatrist. Thus, no effective
program can ever be run with public mental health money without
the collusion of a psychiatric defector.
There is also a reason why no mental health services are run by
learning organizations. A learning organization is one which uses
feedback data from its experiences to alter the process to improve
the quality. To some extent, the learning organization uses a process
of deduction, induction, observation and experiment to seek feedback
regarding outcomes which meet specific expectations. When the process
fails to produce the expected outcomes, the process is changed based
upon a new hypothesis which includes the findings of the original
process. A learning organization using the medical model would need
to discontinue using it based on the continued failure to help people
with problems in living.
This is true, of course, only if helping people with problems in
living was is the goal! If helping people manage their own behavior
is not the goal, and the goal is to control the behavior of such
people, then the use of the information learned might indicate that
the biomedical approaches have still failed, except when the subjects
can be both medicated AND incarcerated. Further, it is not the most
successful method for behavior control as the NAZIs proved
in World War II. For a comparison of the two processes and how the
biomedical process lead to the gas chambers, interested readers
may want to pursue The Relevance of the NAZI Euthanasia Program
to Contemporary Sociomedical Dilemmas by Hugh Gregory Gallagher
in a publication called IDEAS, probably published in 1989.
We must be cautious regarding the scientific method, which although
a worthwhile process is bound by philosophic thought. As Gallagher
said it must be said that physicians have carelessly, and some even
wantonly, harmed their patients. This was because their philosophical
perspective indicated that it was all right to do so, just as present
philosophical thought indicates that it is alright to incarcerate
a person for his or her own good. Philosophy differs from science
in that it attempts to determine without bias the worth
of every variable in the experience, whereas the scientist merely
seeks to describe selected facts of the experience which lie within
his or her special field. No individual or organization can reach
right results without a clear definition of a personal or organizational
summum bonum, (lifes greatest good). Without a clear understanding
of what we mean by whats best, we are open to committing atrocities
with good intent.
The present beliefs about people with problems in living, supported
by a few respected men who have fortified a brazen claim with their
prestige, has become a cliche that gets repeated endlessly as if
it were self-evident. Any protest is regarded as a heresy that shows
how those who utter it do not belong: arguments are not met on their
merits; instead one rehearses a few illustrious names and possible
deigns to contrast them with some horrible examples. Thomas Szasz,
Peter Breggin, Hugh Drummond and others have raised serious questions
about the model and have had their credentials and careers attacked.
Yet the evidence of failure continues without abatement.
According to Koyanagi & Gaines, in All Systems Failure -1993,
all of our systems have failed. Over the past twenty years, numerous
reports have chronicled the lack of appropriate services to meet
the needs of children and adolescents with serious emotional disturbance.
These previous studies report that children in need of mental health
care often do not receive it or receive care that is inappropriate
or inadequate [italics added].
The Joint Commission on the Mental Health of Children [1969], the
Presidents Commission on Mental Health [1978], the Office
of Technology Assessment [1986], the Institute of Medicine [1989]
and the House Select Committee on Children, Youth and Families [1990]
all concur that there are too few resources and that too many of
the services which do exist are uncoordinated, inefficient and ultimately
ineffective.
In 1989 the National Governors Association declared that
what is needed is a commitment to translate existing knowledge into
an effective system to assist these children and their families
in a comprehensive manner. And yet an effective system is blocked
by the psychiatrists who control the model. And the apologists
claim that we just need more money. All this continues to occur
under the rubric of science. The only justification for such atrocities
is the science that supports it. Yet there is no science, only a
few respected men who claim to be scientists.
By an inductive argument, after many repetitions of this experiment
we should eventually conjecture [hypothesize] that there is a direct
relationship between the failure of the system and the medical model.
This is an empirical law. Yes it is true, that we have not, in all
cases, controlled all factors in the experiment, but common sense
should lead us to the conclusion that the model did not work when
such controls were in place [such as the Snake Pits of past institutionalization]
and will not work in the future no matter how much we would like
it to be so. The idea that we can simply take a drug and suddenly
all the problems in living will go away is an attractive one as
is the idea that a pathology relieves parental guilt that they may
have done something wrong. These are powerful incentives to make
the model work. But it doesnt.
The characteristic feature of a theory is that it offers a means
of relating the laws describing a class of events to a framework
and a set of principles described in terms differing from those
used for laws. The empirical observations of people with severe
problems in living, and the evidence suggested by experimental observation
does not suggest in any manner that the person is not in control
of their own behavior. Rather it suggests just the opposite. Anyone
who has ever spent time with a person in a psychotic episode recognizes
that there is an internal logic to the behavior. People in a state
of psychosis respond out of fear or planning, but the logic is only
bizarre to the outside observer.
The research evidence is beginning to demonstrate what spiritual
leaders have always known, that the internal mental context controls
the behavior, and that often these contexts are maladaptive because
of the failure of the individual and those around him to habitually
codify goodness as a causal factor. People, by and large, are astonishingly
attracted to the catastrophic interpretation of things [Seligman],
and catastrophic interpretations lead one to think in paranoic terms.
Protection of self is one of the primary instincts of any animal,
and the need to protect oneself against catastrophic events is powerful.
Self fulfilling worry supports the paranoia. Its somewhat like the
joke of the man sitting at the part bench waving his arms frantically.
When asked why, he says it is to keep the elephants away. When the
observer points out that there are no elephants in the park, the
man states see, it works!.
Sooner or later the catastrophic interpretation and worry solidifies
into a personality who has severe trouble relating to other people.
Which, of course, causes other people to act in ways that reinforce
the original notions, being abrupt and even callous to someone who
is irritating at best. Choices prevail. Is this empirically justifiable?
Seems to be. Then where is the pathology? The medical expert would
contend that it is the degree, not the type. But perhaps, finally
you should refer to Power, Madness and Poverty, by Dr. Hugh Drummond
published in Mother Jones, January 1980 .
Imagine a group of people who are always together. Their work
totals about 30 hours each week. It is cooperative, proceeds at
an easy pace, includes everyone and is accompanied by pleasant chatter.
There is no discrimination between labor, politics, homemaking and
play. Children are free to go anywhere because everywhere they are
watched, fed and taught as if every adult were their parent. There
is much touching. Conflict is discussed until consensus is reached
on what is best for everyone. There is no violence. When children
fight, they are distracted by amusement or affection from an adult.
People take only what they need, and what each needs is what all
need. They worship their environment...
Now imagine a group of people who have lost their humanity. There
is no kindness, compassion or caring. Love does not exist. Sex,
when it occurs, is as perfunctory and joyless as defecation. The
only source of satisfaction is someone elses misery. Children
are abandoned at age three. The sick are beaten; the dead left unburied.
There is no religion, no ritual, no art, no hope, no rage, no sadness.
There is only boredom, bitterness, envy and suspicion.
Two very separate groups separated only by two generations. Described
originally by Colin Turnbull in The Mountain People the tribe of
the Ik changed after being forced into progress by the Ugandan government.
Little evidence exists for genetic predisposition, chemical imbalance
or other pathology as being the cause of this change. Clear evidence
exists that a change in tradition, ritual, and habit which made
up a culture which supported psychological fitness and lead to despair
was a causal factor. Such evidence is abundant and is often even
quoted by the scientist who support evidence to the contrary. It
is as common as the sun rising every day in the east or the pencil
dropping off your desk and hitting the ground.
Tolstoy [as reported by James Gleick, 1987] says it best. I know
that most men, including those at ease with problems of the greatest
complexity, can seldom accept even the simplest and most obvious
truth if it be such as would oblige them to admit the falsity of
conclusions which they have delighted in explaining to colleagues,
which they have proudly taught to others, and which they have woven,
thread by thread, into the fabric of their lives.
Mundus vult decipi: the world wants to be deceived. Yet as we look
at the results of our pseudoscience called mental health, we find
our world becoming more like the new world of the Ik and we wonder
why.
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