Diseases of the Mind: Philosophy of Psychiatry by Philosophy Talk published on 2015-03-04T01:09:56Z More at http://philosophytalk.org/shows/diseases-mind-philosophy-psychiatry. The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual is the primary reference catalog for mental health illnesses. But whereas a medical textbook will show you the picture of a broken bone or a tumor, leaf through the DSM and you will find just one thing: lists of symptoms. Who creates these lists, and based on what criteria? Do such lists really capture the nature of a mental illness? What does it mean to be a disease of the mind versus a disease of the body? Does our classification system construct mental illness, or does it reveal underlying facts from genetics or neuroscience? John and Ken diagnose the issues with Jerome Wakefield from NYU, co-author of "The Loss of Sadness: How Psychiatry Transformed Normal Sorrow Into Depressive Disorder." Genre philosophy Comment by Nice person Psychology & psychiatry presume to answer philisophocal questions on our behalf, that's one of the biggest problems with it, in terms of accuracy. I had a huge discussion about this with one of my friends, I could talk about it all day. I'll be listening! 2015-03-08T09:42:31Z