2. Shamans originally treated the possessed
a. Priests assumed the role of exorcist
b. Many priests advocated humane care
2.
Plato and Aristotle
a. Criminal acts examined by Plato
1 ) Suggested humane treatment
2 ) Addressed insanity as a legal defense
b. Plato said behavior was motivated by needs
c. Aristotle described contents of consciousness
1 ) People avoid pain & seek pleasure
2) Followed Hippocrates
3) Later Greek and Roman thought
a. Greek physician Galen studied nervous system
b. Roman culture made post-mortems possible
C. Views in the Middle Ages ("Dark Ages")
1.
Islamic countries continued scientific Greek medicine
2.
Avicenna wrote the Canon of Medicine
3.
European's grew religious/superstitious
a. Mental disorders were prevalent in this
period
b. Sin was seen in only a minority of cases
as a cause (?)
4.
Mass Madness
a. Tarantism episodes in Italy
b. Lycanthropy affected many rural residents
c. Oppression, disease,famine --> mass
hysteria
5.
Exorcism
a. Attacks on Satan's Pride (justifying abuse)
b. Malleus Malefecarium epitomized witch hunting approach
c. Some exorcisms continue in contemporary practice
Witchcraft and mental illness: fact or fiction?
1. Witchhunts
the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries
2. Controversies
concering extent of the witchhunts
a. Schoeneman's denies mental disorder were widely viewed as
witchcraft
b. The historical record isn't clear
B. Establishment of early asylums and shrines
1.
Early asylums
a. Treatments designed to restore balance in the body
b. Methods were powerful and aggressive
see p 41-42 for great quotes
2.
The Geel Shrine provided humane care.
C. Humanitarian reform
1. Pinel's Experiment
a. He removed chains from mental patients
b. Treated patients with kindness and as sick people
c. His Bicetre and Salpetriere
the first modern mental hospitals
2. Tuke's work
in England
a. The York Retreat was established
b. helped change attitudes re: demonic possession
3. Rush and
moral management in America
a. He founded American psychiatry
b. He invented the "tranquilizer"
c. Stresses or moral causes of insanity proposed
d. Moral management abandoned by late 1800s
An emphasis on physical basis of mental illness undermined Moral Management
4. Dix
and the Mental Hygiene movement
a. Aroused awareness of inhumane treatment
b. Ironically, the Mental Hygiene movement condemned
patients to dependency
c. Contemporaries criticized Dix's work as leading to the warehousing
of the mentally ill
The Growth of Scientific Research
A. The Roots of the
Biological Viewpoint
1. Pasteur discovered microbes spoiling wine
2. General paresis.
a confusing pattern of symptoms, physical and mental
recognized as caused by syphillis, and underlying infection
B. The Establishment
of brain pathology as a causal factor
C. The Beginnings
of a classification system
1. Kraepelin
2. Recognizing & carefully documenting symptom patterns
D. Advances resulting
from early biological views
E. Advances
in psychological understanding of disorders:
The psychodynamic perspective
1. The roots of the psychodynamic viewpoint
a. Mesmerism
b. The Nancy School
2. The beginnings of psychoanalysis
F. Advances
in other psychological research
1. The behavioral perspective
2. Roots of the behavioral perspective
a. Classical conditioning (Pavlov)
b. Instrumental conditioning
Thorndike, Watson, Skinner
Some Unresolved Issues on Interpreting Historical Events
A.
Retrospective analysis has limitations
1. There is an absence of direct observation
2. Written accounts may be incomplete
a. Historical articles are out of context
of the times
b. A propaganda element may be present in
them
B.
Current viewpoints color our interpretation of past events
1. Conclusions are only working hypotheses
2. Need to search for "new" historical documents
Models for Understanding Abnormal Behavior
1. Competing explanations
can be confusing, esp. to laymen or the simple-minded
2. Professionals often utilize
many theoretical perspectives rather than one
The Biological Viewpoint
Biological Causal Factors
A. Neurotransmitter and Hormonal Imbalances
B. Genetic defects
1. Chromosomal
anomalies
Normal chromosomes versus abnormal.
Down's syndrome produced by trisomy 21
2. Structures of genes are
seen by electron microscopes
3. Contrasts between dominant
and recessive genes
4. Gene expression is the
result of an intricate process
5. Polygenetically transmission
is probably common
6. Methods for studying
genetic influences
C. Other Constitutional liabilities
1.
Physical handicaps
a. Congenital defects are present at birth
b. Low birth weight is a risk factor
c. can Emotional distress of mother induce
prematurity?
d. Importance of prenatal development is
documented
2.
Primary reaction tendencies and temperament
a. Longitudinal Studies show enduring reaction
tendencies
fearfulness, irritability, positive affect, activity level,
persistence, extroversion are relatively stable
b. Childhood disturbance often followed by adult
illness
3.
Brain dysfunction
3. Impact on our views of psychopathology
a.
This was the first modern systematic psychosocial model.
b.
Problems in coping associated with disorder
c.
Critics focused on the overemphasis on the sex drive
d.
Many insights now taken for granted as "generic"
defense mechanisms, trauma as cause of disorder, the unconscious, etc.
often, people associate Psychoanalysis with some of its stranger ideas




Psychosocial Causes of Mental Illness
A.
Early deprivation or trauma
1. Institutionalization
a. Provence and Lipton's studied infants
in institutions
b. The reversibility of institutional deprivation
2. Deprivation and abuse in the home
a. Failure to thrive
b. View world as untrustworthy
3. Childhood trauma
a. Childhood trauma causes lasting effects
b. Traumas are generalized to other situations
c. Effects of trauma resistant to cognitive reappraisal
4. Inadequate parenting
1. Parental psychopathology
a. depression
b. alcoholism
2. Parental warmth and control
a. Parenting syles are described
3. Pathogenic family structures
a. Marital discord
A lack of satisfaction can lead to frustration and negative effects
on children
b. Disturbed families have eccentricities or abnormalities
e.g., marital schism and marital skew
c. Divorced and families
single-parent and reconstituted families are increasing due to divorce
Effects of disruption are greatest during the first year
can have long-term consequences
but, what exactly has the consequences? conflict? divorce? poverty?
4. Maladaptive peer relationships
a. chronic or severe conflict with peers is upsetting and impedes normal
development
b. a lack of empathy interfers with social relations; a vicious circle
c. the ability to understand and interact constructively with others develops
with experience
it seems central to mental health
d. Socialization "casualities" result from scapegoating peers
e. Peer relationship influence self-schemas
f. Sources of popularity versus rejection
* Status stability is found by the fifth grade
* Rejection by peers can have many causes and lead to social isolation
* Adult outcomes are negative for the child with inadequate peer relations
however, shy young children are not at appreciably
higher risk
The Sociocultural Viewpoint
A. The sociocultural environment
A. Adherence to a systematic viewpoint has strengths and weaknesses