From one of the most renowned and controversial thinkers in behavioral science, here is a critical examination of the way both science and society define insanity.
Attacking the universally accepted psychiatric doctrines that blur the distinction between literal and metaphoric diseases, Szasz argues that insanity is not an objectively definable or identifiable condition and presents a more fully-rounded account of the insanity concept, showing how it relates to and differs from three close.
From one of the most renowned and controversial thinkers in behavioral science, here is a critical examination of the way both science and society define insanity