littlebabyjesus
one of Maxwell's demons
I'm serious, btw. I really do see parallels between a rigid adherence to a medical model and r/w politics.I dunno, how serious have you been up to this point?
I'm serious, btw. I really do see parallels between a rigid adherence to a medical model and r/w politics.I dunno, how serious have you been up to this point?
I'm serious, btw. I really do see parallels between a rigid adherence to a medical model and r/w politics.
You comparing me to evo-psych?
How very dare you.
Sticking to mental health issues, mental health is both a medical and very much a political issue, necessarily so as it can involve detention and treatment against people's will. As such, I think the connection in this particular area is both valid and necessary.
Both of those just look like approaches to treating a particular individual.
No, the former is medical model and individualist (locates the problem purely in the individual), the latter is a social model (looks at the problem in the context of the person's relationships).
There's no wider setting, just the withholding of drugs (and the adaptation to the voices element). Might as well say the drugs approach is the left-wing approach because that makes it less likely the individual's relationships will suffer but taking drugs will make the patient weak, and the voices are something to be overcome.
It's a continuation of the 'toasters/cars/band t-shirts/cheese-before-chilli are right-wing' thing that I've only ever seen on Urban.
With all due respect, you don't know what you're talking about.
I dunno, how serious have you been up to this point?
Blagsta's post expresses what I was trying to get at.You've brought a lot of extra stuff to what LBJ actually said there.
I'm serious, btw. I really do see parallels between a rigid adherence to a medical model and r/w politics.
Blagsta's post expresses what I was trying to get at.
Yes, it's a multi-dimensional issue. See where I'm going with the 'everything looks like a nail when all you have is a hammer' thing?
You seem to be claiming that the models we use to understand things are divorced from social context. Which is frankly ludicrous.
Ooh, devastating smackdown there.
Obviously you'll be able to back up why things are left-wing when you like them and not when you don't.
From your posts.How do you come to that conclusion?
I have backed them up.
From your posts.How do you come to that conclusion?
From your posts.
If you didn't mean that then I'm clueless as to what you do mean.
My main point is that health is political.
I think left/right wing is still a valid thing to talk about. It's a simplification, but a useful one, imo.
Imo many of the attempts to produce more complex pictures of political views are less useful because they miss out what, for me, is the essential distinction, which is precisely the view towards collective action and when and how it should be done.
I don't think I said anything much about left and right. I thought I was opposing individualist models to social models.
I'm discussing sociology of health with a computer programmer.
I'm not a computer programmer. And you're not so much discussing sociology of health as making some kind of appeal to authority. Try to focus on things I've actually said.