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Madness Explained Psychosis and Human Nature

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ISBN-10: 0140275401

ISBN-13: 9780140275407

Edition: 2004

Authors: Richard P. Bentall, Aaron T. Beck

List price: $22.95
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Description:

This text shatters the myths that surround madness. It shows that there is no reassuring dividing line between mental health and mental illness. Severe mental disorders can not be reduced to brain chemistry, but must be understood psychologically, as part of normal behaviour and human nature.
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Book details

List price: $22.95
Copyright year: 2004
Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
Publication date: 4/29/2004
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 656
Size: 5.16" wide x 7.76" long x 1.10" tall
Weight: 0.990
Language: English

Richard P. Bentallis professor of clinical psychology at the University of Bangor in Wales. He has held chairs in clinical psychology at the universities of Liverpool and Manchester. Known internationally for his research into the causes and treatment of severe mental illness, he is also the author of the award-winning bookMadness Explained: Psychosis and Human Nature.

A native of Rhode Island, Aaron Beck had an early interest in psychology. After graduating from Brown University, he embarked on a career in medicine at Yale University with the intention of specializing in psychiatry. Dissatisfied with classical psychoanalysis, he turned to modified psychoanalytic approaches and was particularly influenced by ego psychology advanced by Rapaport. Ego psychology directed his interest in cognition, and over time Beck abandoned the psychoanalytic framework and formulated his own cognitive theory-behavior therapy for patients with depression and other psychiatric disorders. He developed numerous measurement scales, including the Beck Depression Inventory, the…    

Acknowledgements
Foreword
Author's preface
Emil Kraepelin's big idea : the origins of modern psychiatric theory
After Kraepelin : how the standard approach to psychiatric classification evolved
The great classification crisis : how it was discovered that the standard system was scientifically meaningless
Fool's gold : why psychiatric diagnoses do not work
The boundaries of madness : why there is no boundary between sanity and madness
Them and us : modern psychiatry as a cultural system
The significance of biology : psychosis, the brain and the concept of 'disease'
Mental life and human nature : madness and the social brain
Madness and emotion : human emotions and the negative symptoms of psychosis
Depression and the pathology of self : core psychological processes that are important in severe mental illness
A colourful malady : the psychology of mania
Abnormal attitudes : the psychology of delusional beliefs
On the paranoid world view : towards a unified theory of depression, mania and paranoia
The illusion of reality : the psychology of hallucinations
The language of madness : the communication difficulties of psychotic patients
Things are much more complex than they seem : the instability of psychosis, and the solution to the riddle of psychiatric classification
From the cradle to the clinic : psychosis considered from a developmental perspective
The trials of life : how life experiences shape madness
Madness and society : some implications of post-Kraepelinian psychopathology
App: A glossary of technical and scientific terms
Notes
Index