What Neuroscience Tells Us About Mental Illness: Scientific Realism in the Biomedical Sciences

Q4 Arts and Humanities Revista de Humanidades de Valparaiso Pub Date : 2022-12-02 DOI:10.22370/rhv2022iss20pp119-140
Marc Jiménez-Rolland, Mario Gensollen
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Abstract

Our philosophical understanding of mental illness is being shaped by neuroscience. However, it has the paradoxical effect of igniting two radically opposed groups of philosophical views. On one side, skepticism and denialism assume that, lacking clear biological mechanisms and etiologies for most mental illnesses, we should infer they are constructions best explained by means of social factors. This is strongly associated with medical nihilism: it considers psychiatry more harmful than benign. On the other side of the divide, naturalism and reductionism are on the look for failures in the biological functioning of the organism whenever a genuine mental illness occurs. Psychiatry as currently practiced, accordingly, exhibits the gaps of an ongoing research programme; a yet to be completed neuroscience would link mental illnesses with identifiable biological mechanisms. Both sides of this divide claim to be fostered by scientific discoveries and advances in neuroscience, when taken at face value. Against this background, we argue instead for a modest view. To that end, we draw attention to some nuances in the scientific realism debate. While contending that neuroscientific theories and models aim to provide true representations of their target systems, and can justifiably claim to have attained some, we argue that our confidence should not be placed beforehand in specific features of these scientific representations. Hence, it would be unwarranted to extract morals for psychiatry from posits (or their absence) in neuroscientific explanations of mental illnesses. To illustrate our position, we examine some recent discoveries in neuroscience concerning bipolar disorder. We conclude by linking our topic to a broader issue in the philosophy of medicine: insofar as psychiatry is a biomedical specialty, its classifications of health and disease are guided by pragmatic concerns, as well as by scientific discoveries.
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神经科学告诉我们的精神疾病:生物医学科学中的科学现实主义
神经科学正在塑造我们对精神疾病的哲学理解。然而,它具有矛盾的效果,点燃了两个截然不同的哲学观点群体。一方面,怀疑论和否认论认为,由于缺乏大多数精神疾病的明确生物学机制和病因,我们应该推断它们是通过社会因素解释得最好的结构。这与医学虚无主义密切相关:它认为精神病学比良性更有害。另一方面,每当真正的精神疾病发生时,自然主义和还原论都在寻找生物体生物功能的失败。因此,目前实践的精神病学显示出正在进行的研究方案的差距;一项尚未完成的神经科学将把精神疾病与可识别的生物学机制联系起来。从表面上看,这种分歧的双方都声称是由科学发现和神经科学进步促成的。在这种背景下,我们主张采取温和的观点。为此,我们提请注意科学现实主义辩论中的一些细微差别。虽然我们认为神经科学理论和模型旨在提供其目标系统的真实表征,并且可以理直气壮地声称已经获得了一些,但我们认为,我们不应该事先对这些科学表征的特定特征抱有信心。因此,从精神疾病的神经科学解释中的假设(或不存在假设)中提取精神病学的道德是没有根据的。为了说明我们的立场,我们研究了神经科学中关于双相情感障碍的一些最新发现。最后,我们将我们的主题与医学哲学中一个更广泛的问题联系起来:就精神病学而言,它是一门生物医学专业,其健康和疾病的分类以务实的关注和科学发现为指导。
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来源期刊
Revista de Humanidades de Valparaiso
Revista de Humanidades de Valparaiso Arts and Humanities-Philosophy
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
13
审稿时长
5 weeks
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