- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Cognition
- Chapter 2 Affectivity
- Chapter 3 Desire
- Chapter 4 Character
- Chapter 5 Action
- Chapter 6 Self-ascription
- Chapter 7 Memory
- Chapter 8 Body
- Chapter 9 Identity
- Chapter 10 Development
- Chapter 11 Diagnosis/Antidiagnosis
- Chapter 12 Understanding/Explanation
- Chapter 13 Reductionism/Antireductionism
- Chapter 14 Facts/Values
- Chapter 15 Gender
- Chapter 16 Race and Culture
- chapter 17 Competence
- Chapter 18 Dangerousness
- Chapter 19 Treatment and Research Ethics
- Chapter 20 Criminal Responsibility
- Chapter 21 Religion
- Chapter 22 Darwinian Models of Psychopathology
- Chapter 23 Psychoanalytic Models
- Chapter 24 Phenomenological and Hermeneutic Models
- Chapter 25 Neurobiological Models
- Chapter 26 Cognitive-Behavioral Models
- Chapter 27 Social Constructionist Models
- Chapter 28 Setting Benchmarks for Psychiatric Concepts
- Chapter 29 Defining Mental Disorder
- Chapter 30 Mental Illness and Its Limits
- Index
Character
Character
Moral Treatment and the Personality Disorders
- Chapter:
- (p.64) Chapter 4 CHARACTER
- Source:
- The Philosophy of Psychiatry
- Author(s):
- Jennifer Radden
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
This chapter argues that the conditions under the umbrella “personality disorders” actually constitute two very different kinds of theoretical entities. In particular, several core personality disorders are actually moral, and not medical, conditions. Thus, the categories that are held to represent them are really moral, and not medical, theoretical kinds. The chapter works back from the possibility of treatment to the nature of the kinds that are allegedly treated, revisiting 18th-century ideas of moral treatment along the way. The discussion closes with a reflection on how the ambiguous medical status of personality disorders and their treatment today is reminiscent of the ideological tug of war that pits alienist “mad doctors” like Pinel against their lay counterparts such as Tuke as they battled over who should be in charge of treating the mad.
Keywords: moral treatment, medical conditions, moral traits, moral conversion
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- Title Pages
- Dedication
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Contributors
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Cognition
- Chapter 2 Affectivity
- Chapter 3 Desire
- Chapter 4 Character
- Chapter 5 Action
- Chapter 6 Self-ascription
- Chapter 7 Memory
- Chapter 8 Body
- Chapter 9 Identity
- Chapter 10 Development
- Chapter 11 Diagnosis/Antidiagnosis
- Chapter 12 Understanding/Explanation
- Chapter 13 Reductionism/Antireductionism
- Chapter 14 Facts/Values
- Chapter 15 Gender
- Chapter 16 Race and Culture
- chapter 17 Competence
- Chapter 18 Dangerousness
- Chapter 19 Treatment and Research Ethics
- Chapter 20 Criminal Responsibility
- Chapter 21 Religion
- Chapter 22 Darwinian Models of Psychopathology
- Chapter 23 Psychoanalytic Models
- Chapter 24 Phenomenological and Hermeneutic Models
- Chapter 25 Neurobiological Models
- Chapter 26 Cognitive-Behavioral Models
- Chapter 27 Social Constructionist Models
- Chapter 28 Setting Benchmarks for Psychiatric Concepts
- Chapter 29 Defining Mental Disorder
- Chapter 30 Mental Illness and Its Limits
- Index