In Psychiatry in the Scientific Image, Dominic
Murphy looks at psychiatry from the viewpoint of analytic philosophy of
science, considering three issues: how we should conceive of, classify,
and explain mental illness. If someone is said to have a mental
illness, what about it is mental? What makes it an illness? How might we
explain and classify it? A system of psychiatric classification settles
these questions by distinguishing the mental illnesses and showing how
they stand in relation to one another. This book explores the
philosophical issues raised by the project of explaining and classifying
mental illness. Murphy argues that the current literature on mental
illness--exemplified by the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders--is
an impediment to research; it lacks a coherent concept of the mental
and a satisfactory account of disorder, and yields too much authority to
commonsense thought about the mind. He argues that the explanation of
mental illness should meet the standards of good explanatory practice in
the cognitive neurosciences, and that the classification of mental
disorders should group symptoms into conditions based on the causal
structure of the normal mind.