Mental Health and Enhancement : Substance Use and Its Social Implications / by Stephan Schleim.
By: Schleim, Stephan
Language: English Series: Palgrave studies in law, neuroscience, and human behavior: Publisher: Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan, 2023Edition: 1st ed. 2023Description: 1 online resource (160 pages)Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9783031326189; 3031326180Subject(s): Social psychology | Law and the social sciences | Mental health | Psychology, Pathological | Mental illness | Psychology, Social | Psychopathology | Mental Disorders | Social Psychology | Socio-Legal Studies | Mental Health | Psychopathology | Mental Disorder | Psychologie sociale | Droit et sciences sociales | Psychopathologie | Maladies mentales | social psychology | mental disorders | Law and the social sciences | Mental health | Mental illness | Psychology, Pathological | Social psychology | Salut mental | Drogoaddicció | Problemes socialsGenre/Form: Llibres electrònics.LOC classification: HM1001-1281Other classification: PSY007000 | PSY022000 | PSY023000 | SOC004000 Online resources: Full text is available at the Directroy of Open Access Books. Click here to view. Summary: This book takes the reader from basic questions like "What is health?" and "What is a psychiatric disorder?", into the midst of people's present mental health and enhancement choices. More and more people receive psychiatric diagnoses and the use of psychopharmacological drugs keeps increasing. Concurrently, media report the popularity of "brain doping" or "study drugs" on campuses as well as at the workplace. This open access book tests the hypothesis of whether mental health and enhancement can be seen as two sides of the same coin: that the demands on cognitive and emotional functioning have been increasing and psychoactive substances are used to meet these demands. Whether the increasing number of diagnoses means that really more people are suffering from psychological problems will be discussed just as whether the media accurately describe "brain doping" as a new and rising trend. An individual section describes non-pharmacological alternatives to maintain and increase one's mental well-being. To answer these and many more questions, the author critically reviews evidence from epidemiology, psychiatry, and psychology. That people with and without psychiatric diagnoses are often using the same substances - for example, the stimulant drugs Adderall or Ritalin - to cope with their problems is presented as evidence to look beyond the traditional distinction between disorder, health, and enhancement. Likewise, different meanings of "drug" in historical and present contexts illustrate that the way we think of mental health and (il)legitimate drug use reflects our own culture. The book's focus on addiction/substance use disorders makes it also relevant to the ongoing discussion of drug policy. Stephan Schleim is Associate Professor of Theoretical Psychology at the University of Groningen, The Netherlands, and author of different books on philosophy, psychology, and the neurosciences. He has also been acting chair in Neurophilosophy at the University of Munich, Germany. He has carried out several research projects on the theory and ethics of neuroscience. The focus of his investigations have been the conditions under which scientific knowledge is created and communicated to the public.| Item type | Current location | Home library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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EBOOK/OPEN ACCESS
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COLLEGE LIBRARY | COLLEGE LIBRARY | Not for loan |
This book takes the reader from basic questions like "What is health?" and "What is a psychiatric disorder?", into the midst of people's present mental health and enhancement choices. More and more people receive psychiatric diagnoses and the use of psychopharmacological drugs keeps increasing. Concurrently, media report the popularity of "brain doping" or "study drugs" on campuses as well as at the workplace. This open access book tests the hypothesis of whether mental health and enhancement can be seen as two sides of the same coin: that the demands on cognitive and emotional functioning have been increasing and psychoactive substances are used to meet these demands. Whether the increasing number of diagnoses means that really more people are suffering from psychological problems will be discussed just as whether the media accurately describe "brain doping" as a new and rising trend. An individual section describes non-pharmacological alternatives to maintain and increase one's mental well-being. To answer these and many more questions, the author critically reviews evidence from epidemiology, psychiatry, and psychology. That people with and without psychiatric diagnoses are often using the same substances - for example, the stimulant drugs Adderall or Ritalin - to cope with their problems is presented as evidence to look beyond the traditional distinction between disorder, health, and enhancement. Likewise, different meanings of "drug" in historical and present contexts illustrate that the way we think of mental health and (il)legitimate drug use reflects our own culture. The book's focus on addiction/substance use disorders makes it also relevant to the ongoing discussion of drug policy. Stephan Schleim is Associate Professor of Theoretical Psychology at the University of Groningen, The Netherlands, and author of different books on philosophy, psychology, and the neurosciences. He has also been acting chair in Neurophilosophy at the University of Munich, Germany. He has carried out several research projects on the theory and ethics of neuroscience. The focus of his investigations have been the conditions under which scientific knowledge is created and communicated to the public.
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EBOOK/OPEN ACCESS
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