The Unbalanced Mind (Maps Of The Mind)

The Unbalanced Mind (Maps Of The Mind)

by JulianLeff (Author)

Synopsis

Does the crooked gene give rise to the crooked thought? Satirical aphorisms apart, the revolution in molecular genetics has indeed given rise to the heady optimism that biology will soon explain all disturbances of mind and behaviour. In this important and necessary book, Julian Leff, a world leading psychiatrist, counters this reductionist stance. Instead he emphasises what is known about the psychological, social and cultural factors underlying mental illness. In doing so, he addresses many serious and urgent questions. What exactly is the difference between sadness and depression? What are the difficulties in categorising psychiatric conditions? How are psychiatric diagnoses made in the first place? Are international attempts to standardise diagnosis flawed? Can doctors ever hope to disentangle cause and effect in the treatment of mental illness? What is the influence of emotional relationships on psychiatric conditions? Is there a link between schizophrenia and socio-economic deprivation? How do public attitudes to mental illness affect choice of treatment? And, finally, what does this tell us about the cultural causes of mental illness?Wide-ranging, perceptive and penetrating, this brief counterblast is essential reading for anyone who wishes to be informed about the public debate on mental illness.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 168
Edition: 1st
Publisher: Weidenfeld & Nicolson
Published: 09 Aug 2001

ISBN 10: 0297646400
ISBN 13: 9780297646402
Book Overview: Part of the Maps of the Mind series, edited by Steven Rose, Professor of Biology at the Open University, UK. Published to mark the Decade of the Brain, the series covers all the major topical areas of the science of the human brain and mind. 'The most diverse and rigorous science series for many years', Amazon.co.uk

Author Bio
Julian Leff is Professor of Social and Cultural Psychiatry at the Institute of Psychiatry in London. He has published more than two hundred articles and contributes regularly to television and radio broadcasts. He is the author and co-author of ten books, one of which won the Starkey Prize of the Royal Society of Medicine. In 1999 he became the first winner of the Burgholzli Prize for outstanding contributions to psychiatry.