|
|||||
History
and Systems of Psychology
PSY502
VU
Lesson
27
SCIENTIFIC
LOOK AT MENTAL DISORDERS
Man
viewed and explained mental
illness and diseases
differently in various phases of
past history. Starting
from
the ancient epoch, up to the present,
mental disorders have been
attributed to different things such
as
soul,
mind, etc. As man's thinking
went through various phases of
development, explanation of mental
disorders
also underwent evolution.
The
ancient man thought that
there was a "soul" inside
the body of a person which
was regarded as a
person
within a person. This soul
was responsible for a number of things
including some mental
symptoms
and
diseases. In other words, the explanation
of mental diseases according to the
ancient man was
that
mental
diseases are caused by the abnormal
activities of the soul. When the soul is
disturbed, it causes
mental
symptoms to appear.
The
ancient man also thought
that dreams were the result
of soul's activities. According to
him, soul
escaped
a person's body when he slept
and performed certain acts
for him. These acts
manifested in the
form
of dreams.
The
ancients also thought that a
"mad" person was one
who did not take
interest in himself and
happenings
around
him. They thought that
"mad" people live in world of
their own, and "see" things
that are not
present,
and are involved in
"spiritual experiences."
According
to the ancient Greeks and
Romans mentally ill people were
possessed by spirits. Initially this
idea
was
held but later as the Greek
and Roman civilizations flourished
and developed their explanations
of
mental
disorders and illnesses were
also reformed. They saw that
mental symptoms are due to
medical
problems
and not spiritual in
nature.
Some
people regarded mentally ill people above
normal people and thought they could
foretell future.
Various
decisions were referred to mentally ill
people and they were held in high
esteem, by these
people.
Later
in time, mad or mentally ill were
regarded as witches and
wizards, and instead of treating them
they
were
tortured and some were
burnt to death. This practice
was prevalent up to the 14th and the 15th
century
when
man had become much
civilized as compared to the ancient
man.
In
the ancient times, some people
also regarded "mad" or mentally
sick as possessed by evil
spirits and tried
various
means of ridding them of these
possessions. Such measures included
physical torture,
beating,
bleeding
and burning alive. One of such
measures which were used by
the ancient Egyptian civilization
was
trepanning.
It was the process of drilling a
hole in the skull of the mentally ill
person to allow the evil or
bad
spirit
to escape.
As
mentioned earlier, from 13th to 14th
century the practice of torturing
and killing mentally ill
people
prevailed.
This was mainly because mentally
ill people were thought to be
witches or wizards or
possessed
by
the devil. Many women and
men were burnt alive for
this reason. Even up to the fifteenth
century
mentally
sick people were considered to be
possessed by evil spirits
and were very cruelly treated. They
were
treated
the same as thieves, robbers,
and beggars. They were
chained, hand-cuffed and
imprisoned.
As
a result of the French Revolution
and the beginning of the end of
feudalism, many people had moved
to
the
cities because villages could
not sustain them. There was
not much food available
and in search of it
they
shifted. Further, as a result of the
Industrial Revolution many people
sought jobs in the industries
and
therefore
migrated to where they were
set up. It resulted in creating of
small industrial cities
where huge
workforce
of the industry dwelled. Furthermore, because of
these mass migrations, existing cities
and
industrial
towns became crowded. In these populous
cities, petty crime, unemployment
and begging became
rampant.
Those found guilty of such
crimes were held and kept
alongside those who were
considered
mentally
ill. This was one of the
problems of the industrial revolution
and the French revolution.
Although
the
outlook of mankind had
changed and had become
more rational, the problem of
dealing with crimes
and
mentally ill people became a daunting
challenge. The need therefore
arose to separate criminals
and
62
History
and Systems of Psychology
PSY502
VU
group
such people together and find a common
solution for such social
problems. The solution was
to label
them
mentally sick and put them in
asylums and institutions
specially made for such
people. These
institutions
were not meant to separate
the mentally ill people from the society
but their main aim
was to
help
these people recover. That is why
Paris and Lyons, in France,
and Bristol and Norwich in
England
established
asylums or institutions to house
such people.
In
other words, the purpose of
these places was to
"discipline" and "cure" the
inmates. And the way
to
"cure"
them was to put them to work.
Thus the criminal and the mentally ill
were treated alike, put at
the
same
place and work was
suggested as the main "cure" of
their problems.
Putting
the blame on individuals of the social
changes and upheavals such
as disappearance of feudalism
and
the beginning of industrialization is
termed scapegoating. Thus mentally
sick people became the
scapegoats
of problem arising from the
end of feudalism and the
problems of industrialization.
In
the middle and end of the
18th century, as the outlook of man
became more scientific and
rational,
mental
illness was beginning to be
regarded as nervous diseases. This
marked the beginning of a
scientific
outlook
towards mental
diseases.
63
Table of Contents:
|
|||||