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Madness Explained: Psychosis and Human Nature
 
 

Madness Explained: Psychosis and Human Nature (Paperback)

by Richard P Bentall (Author) "It is nearly twenty years since I first walked on to a psychiatric ward ..." (more)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
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Product Description

The Independent Magazine

'Will give readers a glimpse both of answers to their own problems, and to questions about how the mind works'


The Sunday Times

'Madness Explained is a substantial, yet highly accessible work. Full of insight and humanity, it deserves a wide readership.'

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
It is nearly twenty years since I first walked on to a psychiatric ward. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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11 Reviews
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4.2 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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64 of 66 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Psychiatrists - Do not be afraid!, 16 Feb 2007
By liz (Hampshire) - See all my reviews
Confession 1:I am a Psychiatrist.
Confession 2: Before I started this book I was expecting a deeply negative perception of modern psychiatry and little in the way of concrete evidence to support any alternative hypothesis. I anticipated this book to he read mainly by other psychologists, anti-psychiatrists and disgruntled patients.

However, I rapidly discovered that this is not the start of a new anti-psychiatry movement but in fact a fascinating, open-minded review of the current thinking about madness.

The first third of this book should be read by everyone involved in or interested in psychiatry, psychology, or just madness. It is a brilliant and genuinely gripping synthesis of the journey from dark age beliefs about madness to the current concepts. The author makes this potentially dreary history lesson vibrant, relevant and insightful and brings alive many of the key players whose legacies have outlived them, whether deservedly or not.

After this the author then goes on to explore in quite significant detail, the psychological and biological research into psychosis and related conditions. This is predictably heavier going but worth persevering with for the exciting and occasionally startling revelations.
As a result, he fairly comprehensively dismantles the traditional model of psychiatric classification but manages to bring even the most sceptical reader with him through this process.I did not find this as controversial as I expected, as most practising psychiatrists are already aware of the significant overlap in diagnoses and symptoms of these disorders. Richard Bentall then formulates draft models for approaching particular psychiatric symptoms.

There is much less controversial material in this book than I expected. The research discussed is reasonably balanced and the conclusions are tentative and never fundamentalist.

However, although interesting, evidence-based and realistic, the practical applications of the symptom-directed approach are not at all clear. Abandoning traditional psychiatric diagnoses altogether would at present leave patients, carers and health professionals with even less framework for approaching treatment, suggesting aetiology or predicting prognosis. This book may encourage us to be more flexible and patient-centred but I cannot yet see it changing frontline mental health care.
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105 of 111 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The new synthesis?, 7 Oct 2003
By A Customer
Writing as someone who lives with a son labelled 'schizophrenic', I am immensely grateful for this new and authoritative account of madness. Bentall refuses the Cartesian divide, which requires it to be seen either as a brain disease or as 'all in the mind'. He cites a vast array of evidence drawn from neurology, psychiatry, psychotherapy, psychoanalysis and cognitive psychology to show that brain and mind are two aspects of a single system, and that madness and sanity are two ends of a continuum. He also demolishes the century-old myth that there are two distict illnesses, schizophrenia and manic/depressive disorder.
Bentall has a hopeful message to sufferers and their friends and families, though you have to work through a long book to reach it: family therapy and cognitive behaviour therapy do have the potential to help people back towards sanity. The earlier in life these methods are used, the better the chances of returning to normality. Wider public awareness of the early signs of madness and increased investment in providing these therapies could greatly improve mental health.
It would be misleading to compare Bentall with R D Laing, who asserted a great deal without evidence. However, the book would have benefited by reference to Gregory Bateson's 'ecology of mind'. Bentall only once mentions 'Geoffrey' Bateson, whom he dismisses for blaming the family, though Bateson himself thought in terms not of blame but of two-sided breakdowns in communication.

Bateson had the misfortune to write about madness in the 1950s, just at the time when effective drug treatments were found, and psychiatry began fifty years of obsession with pills. It is to be hoped that the new excitement over atypical drugs will not prevent Bentall's message from being heard.

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52 of 55 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars How Psychology is finding the answers Psychiatry have missed, 10 Aug 2003
By A Customer
A superb review of how Psychiatry has been getting psychosis wrong for the last hundred years: by focussing on flawed reductionist concepts of diagnosis rather than on seeing psychosis as a complex and heterogenous group of presentations and symptoms. By identifying these fundamental flaws of the medical model Bentall is able to demonstrate both how traditional approachs to research are bound to fail, and how a more psychological approach is developing greater understanding and more helpful treatment. Up to date, erudite, but also fascinating for the lay reader. Should be prescribed reading for all trainee psychiatrists, and for any psychologists working with psychosis who need to challenge the assumptions of their medical colleagues.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating and accessible
For anyone who is interested - professionally or personally - in mental health and ill health, this book is a must read. Read more
Published 3 months ago by Ms. Sally Jones

2.0 out of 5 stars No explanation
The title of this book is misleading. Bentall has no better - but, in my view, a potentially more confusing - explanation of madness then those he wishes to supplant... Read more
Published 8 months ago by WhiteCrow

3.0 out of 5 stars Could have been better.
Maybe it was me. Maybe working in Mental Health Care with people diagnosed with inconsistent and inaccurate labels distances me from much of what Richard Bentall writes here. Read more
Published 12 months ago by Oddboy

5.0 out of 5 stars excellent and readable
this is an excellent book which is both readable and yet gets into complexity of the issues
Published 20 months ago by psychologist

5.0 out of 5 stars Vital subject matter, lucid writing, great reading.
This is a great book regardless of whether you would like to understand madness or psychosis. It is an example of a well researched, well written, entertaning, interdisciplinairy... Read more
Published on 12 Feb 2007 by Steep Thought

5.0 out of 5 stars Post-Kraepelinian Approach to Madness!
"Madness explained" is an excellent example of a new synthesis, which assertively, and of course scientifically, challenges the dehumanizing approach to mental health that... Read more
Published on 6 Sep 2005 by B. Karamiani Moghaddam

4.0 out of 5 stars Excellent resource for psychiatric students
This has been by far one of my better buys within this field and I have been absorbed by the fascinating and indepth content. Read more
Published on 16 Mar 2005

3.0 out of 5 stars DEFINITIVE CRITIQUE OF PSYCHIATRY? MAYBE NOT
Penguin Books was RD Laing's publisher. It rescued Laing's first book The Divided Self, which was originally published by Tavistock Press, to create a bestseller. Read more
Published on 1 Oct 2003 by D B Double

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