Originally published in 1973, Thomas Szasz’s collection of aphorisms, definitions and maxims strikes at the heart of confusion, mystification and humbug, in the areas of human relations, language, thought and psychiatry. The book covers the remarkable range of one of America’s most original thinkers and controversial psychiatrists of the twentieth century. It represents an important step in the direction of clear thinking and clear speaking and a stimulating and entertaining insight into man’s inhumanity and intolerance.
Originally published in 1973, Thomas Szasz’s collection of aphorisms, definitions and maxims strikes at the heart of confusion, mystification and humbug, in the areas of human relations, language, thought and psychiatry.
1.Childhood
2. Family
3. Marriage
4. Love
5. Sex
6. Women
7. Ethics
8.
Education
9. Language
10. Classification
11. Justification
12. Significance
13. Emotions
14. Freedom
15. Law
16. Punishment
17. Control and Self-Control
18. Personal Conduct
19. Social Relations
20. Medicine
21. Drugs
22. Suicide
23. Psychiatry
24. Institutional Psychiatry
25. Mental Hospitalization
26.
Psychoanalysis
27. Mental Illness
29. Myth of Mental Illness
30.
Schizophrenia
31. Psychology
32. Psychotherapy
33. Professionalism
34.
Science and Scientism
35. Therapeutic State.
Dr. Thomas S. Szasz (19202012) Thomas Stephen Szasz was born in Budapest, Hungary and emigrated to the United States in 1938. He received his undergraduate degree in physics in 1941 and MD degree in 1944, both from the University of Cincinnati, followed by a medical internship at Boston City Hospital, a year of medical residency at Cincinnati General Hospital, psychiatry residency at the University of Chicago, and psychoanalytic training at the Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis, where he was a Staff member when called to serve at the United States Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Maryland. From 1956-1990, he had a distinguished career as Professor of Psychiatry at the State University of New York Upstate Medical University, Syracuse, NY, where he continued publishing and speaking until his death at age 92. He opposed involuntary psychiatric interventions and argued that what are called mental illnesses are often better described as problems in living. His reputation in defense of these principles was launched in 1961 with The Myth of Mental Illness. He authored 35 books, many translated into multiple languages, and hundreds of articles. He is recognized worldwide as one of the most important critics of psychiatric coercion, particularly involuntary hospitalization, and a defender of individual responsibility and freedom. Dr. Szasz received several honorary degrees, including Doctor of Humane Letters from Towson University and Doctor of Science from Upstate Medical University, and many awards, including Humanist of the Year from the American Humanist Association, the Jefferson Award from the American Institute of Public Service, the Mencken Award from the Free Press Association, and the George Washington Award from the American Hungarian Foundation.