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The Therapeutic State ~ The Burden of Responsibility
Life is
an unending series of choices and, therefore, “problems in living.” Ordinary
choices—what to have for breakfast—we ignore as trivial. Extraordinary
choices—whether to kill ourselves (or worse)—we dismiss as the symptoms of
mental illness. The profession of psychiatry rests on, and caters to, the
ubiquitous human desire to avoid, evade, and deny the very possibility of
morally “unthinkable” choices. We use the rhetoric of psychiatry to
transform such choices into medical-technical problems and “solve” them by
appropriate “medical treatments.” This is why deception and prevarication
are intrinsic to the principles of psychiatry, and fraud and force are
intrinsic to its practices.
We humans are choice-making animals. The freedom to make choices is both a
blessing and a curse. Depending on age, temperament, information, and
alternatives, some people experience the opportunity for choice as
exhilarating, others as tormenting. Traditionally, it was one of the
functions of religion to relieve people of choices. Today, psychiatry and
the therapeutic state perform the same job.
Karl Jaspers (1883–1969)—the great twentieth-century German
psychiatrist-turned-philosopher—understood this. But he identified only one
part of this drama, the patient’s: “Generally formulated, we may say that
these people [“neurotics”] are determined that events for which they are
accountable and in which they are understandably concerned shall be taken as
mere happenings, for which they are entirely irresponsible.” Psychiatrists
were, and are, happy to play the other part, authenticating the person’s
false self-definition as mental patient—medical object, not moral actor.
Lord Acton
There is important religious precedent for the authoritative declaration of falsehood as truth. In 1870, under the leadership of the legendary Pope Pius IX—Pio Nono, the longest-reigning and one of the most colorful popes in history—the Vatican declared the dogma of papal infallibility. This was anathema to Lord Acton (1834–1902), the most respected Catholic layman in Europe in his time. Alienated from the Church, Acton did not leave it; and, probably because he had not been ordained, he was not excommunicated. It was in the context of this moral conflict that, in 1887, in a letter to Bishop Mandell Creighton, Acton made his famous pronouncement:
“I cannot accept your canon that we are to judge Pope and King unlike other men, with a favorable presumption that they did no wrong. If there is any presumption it is the other way against the holders of power, increasing as the power increases. Historic responsibility has to make up for want of legal responsibility. Power tends to corrupt and absolute power corrupts absolutely.”
Most people who quote Lord Acton’s famous dictum today are unaware it refers to papal power and was made by a devout Catholic. In 1882 Acton, now alienated from his great teacher and lifelong friend, Father Johann Ignaz von Döllinger, who was excommunicated for opposing the infallibility doctrine, writes him:
“I came, very slowly and reluctantly indeed to the conclusion that they [the great Catholic notabilities] were dishonest. And I found out a special reason for their dishonesty in the desire to keep up the credit of authority in the Church. . . . When I got to understand history from the sources, especially from unpublished sources, the reason of all this became obvious. There was a conspiracy to deceive. . . . That men might believe the Pope it was resolved to make them believe that vice is virtue and falsehood truth.”
Acton regarded the
claim of papal infallibility as evidence of intolerable religious arrogance
and power. I regard psychiatric infallibility—the unfalsifiability and
irrefutability of psychiatric diagnoses backed by mental-health laws—as
evidence of intolerable psychiatric arrogance and power.
Acton thought “he witnessed the triumph of error in history.” Indeed, he had.
Today, we witness a similar—but more ominous—triumph of error in
medicine-psychiatry. In addition to persuading the public and the government
that human problems are medical diseases, psychiatrists have succeeded in
abolishing the concepts of responsibility, guilt, and innocence, and in
replacing punishment with the irrefutable and ineradicable stigmata of
psychiatric “diagnoses” and “treatments.” “Modern psychiatry,” I wrote in
1970, “dehumanize[s] man by denying . . . the existence, or even the
possibility, of personal responsibility, central to the concept of man as
moral agent.” It accomplishes that evil by treating responsibility,
following Ambrose Bierce, as “a detachable burden easily shifted to the
shoulders of God, Fate, Fortune, Luck or one’s neighbor.” In our day, it is
not merely customary but, in matters that really count, mandatory to unload
responsibility on Mental Illness (“he snapped,” “had a breakdown,” “battled
his demons,” “was on drugs,” “went off prescribed medication,” and so forth).
In Acton’s day the separation of church and state was an established
political practice in many countries. Hence, the Church’s moral failures and
self-arrogated powers affected only persons who chose to be its adherents.
Our predicament is more serious. We live at a time when the alliance of
medicine-psychiatry and the state is taken for granted—viewed as an
unalterable social fact and undoubted moral and social good. Everyone,
regardless of personal choice, is affected, directly or indirectly, by the
powers of the therapeutic state.
Psychiatry and the State
Given
its limited legal-political powers, the Vatican could not have tried to
purge the world of its critics, much less intimidate them into becoming its
crypto-supporters. In contrast, in our day the alliance of psychiatry and
the state has enabled pharmacracy to do just that. Its so-called critics—who
call themselves “antipsychiatrists,” “critical psychiatrists,” “ethical
psychiatrists,” and so on—oppose one or another psychiatric “diagnosis” or
“treatment,” rarely even psychiatric coercion. But they all support the view
that the misbehavior of individuals afflicted with/suffering from so-called
mental illnesses ought not be regulated by the same rules as are the
misbehaviors of individuals not so denominated: They recoil from defending
an ethic based on personal responsibility for public actions (as distinct
from private actions, called “thoughts”) and of every individual’s
inalienable right to his or her life and death, lest they appear
uncompassionate and, perish the thought, unscientific and illiberal (in the
modern, statist sense of “liberal”). Thus they endorse—explicitly or by the
assent of silence—psychiatry’s war on responsibility, epitomized by the wars
on drugs, mental illness, and suicide and by the insanity defense.
“Truth,” said Thomas Jefferson, “will do well enough if left to shift for
herself. She seldom has received much aid from the power of great men to
whom she is rarely known and seldom welcome. She has no need of force to
procure entrance into the minds of men. . . . It is error alone which needs
the support of government.” Jefferson was right in applying this principle
to religion: modern states should not (and for the most part do not) lend
their coercive powers to the support of the clerical lies of priests. Nor
should they lend their coercive powers to the support of the clinical lies
of psychiatrists. As long as they do, serious persons ought not to take
psychiatry seriously—except as a threat to reason, responsibility, and
liberty.
Thomas Szasz
Szasz, T.S.
(2008),
"The
Therapeutic State ~ The Burden of Responsibility",
The Freeman,
58: 10 (December), 2008.
Thomas
Szasz is professor of psychiatry emeritus at SUNY Upstate Medical University in
Syracuse. His latest books, both from Syracuse University Press, are The
Medicalization of Everyday Life: Selected Essays and Psychiatry: The Science of
Lies.
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