1 / 14

A natural history of paranoia Towards a Darwinian psychodynamics

A natural history of paranoia Towards a Darwinian psychodynamics. Andreas De Block & Pieter Adriaens (Nijmegen (NL) /Leuven (B)) Human Behavior and Evolution Society Berlin, July 2004. Overview. 1. Some history 2. Dimensional versus categoric 3. The distributional model

stu
Download Presentation

A natural history of paranoia Towards a Darwinian psychodynamics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A natural history of paranoia Towards a Darwinian psychodynamics Andreas De Block & Pieter Adriaens (Nijmegen (NL) /Leuven (B)) Human Behavior and Evolution Society Berlin, July 2004

  2. Overview • 1. Some history • 2. Dimensional versus categoric • 3. The distributional model • 4. The harmful dysfunction model • 5. The Darwinian psychodynamics model • 6. Darwinian psychodynamics and paranoid schizophrenia • 7. Darwinian psychodynamics and creativity A Natural History of Paranoia

  3. 1. Some history From queen of madness to schizophrenic subtype  Greek antiquity: - (‘out of mind’)  19th century: paranoia versus dementia praecox (schizophrenia)  Today (DSM-IV): A Natural History of Paranoia

  4. Emil Kraepelin (1856-1926) A Natural History of Paranoia

  5. Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (DSM-IV, 1994) A Natural History of Paranoia

  6. 2. Dimensional versus categoric • DSM-I (1952) & DSM-II (1967): a dimensional perspective • ‘A continuum between mental health and mental illness’ • DSM-III (1980) & DSM-IV (1994): a categoric perspective • ‘Mental disorders differ qualitatively from normality, as well as from each other’ • Evolutionary psychiatry’s distributional model • Evolutionary psychiatry’s harmful dysfunction model A Natural History of Paranoia

  7. 3. The distributional model • What? Mental disorders are real blow-ups of very useful adaptations • Why blow-ups? ▪ Smoke detector principle ▪ Lack of fine-tuning ▪ Childhood experiences • Which illnesses? Paranoid personality disorder, delusional disorder, … • Problems? Cannot account for bizarre delusions in (paranoid) schizophrenia A Natural History of Paranoia

  8. 4. The harmful dysfunction model (Wakefield 1997) • What? ‘A harmful failure of internal mechanisms to perform their naturally selected functions’ (Wakefield 1999, 374) • Which illnesses? Schizophrenia,… • Why failure? ▪ Neuropathology, genetics, neuroimaging ▪ Schizophrenia’s heritability ▪ Decrease of reproductive success • Problems? Cannot account for schizophrenic subtypes A Natural History of Paranoia

  9. Schizophrenia’s subtypes • Four subtypes: paranoid, disorganized, catatonic & undifferentiated • Schizophrenic subtypes do not ‘breed true’ Some quotes: ▪ ‘[T]he aetiology of subtypes may differ from the aetiology of schizophrenia’ (Onstad et al. 1991, 203). ▪ ‘Familial factors strongly affect an individual’s liability to develop the syndrome of schizophrenia but do not greatly influence the specific subtype that will emerge’ (Kendler et al. 1988, 60). A Natural History of Paranoia

  10. 5. The Darwinian psychodynamics model • What? ‘Some mental disorders can be defined by referring to the fixated and overactive use of defences, cognitive mechanisms, and the like, in a context where either no defences are needed, or other defences would be more appropriate’ • Which illnesses? Paranoid & catatonic schizophrenia, OCD, certain paraphilias,… • Why psychodynamic? Freud: some mental illnesses are due to the fixation of particular defense mechanisms (e.g. the case of Daniel Paul Schreber) • Problems? Cannot account for many other mental illnesses A Natural History of Paranoia

  11. John Bowlby (1907-1990) & Sigmund Freud (1856-1939) A Natural History of Paranoia

  12. 6. Darwinian psychodynamics and paranoid schizophrenia • Brain abnormalities in schizophrenia cause abnormal sending and filtering of information • ‘Hemispherical confusion’ & lack of indexicality resulting in: ▪ Inappropriate defence mechanisms, e.g. suspicion ▪ ‘Fight or flight’-response ▪ Overactivity of Theory of Mind Module • If suspicion proves ineffective, other evolved strategies are developed: ▪ Megalomania ▪ Catatonia A Natural History of Paranoia

  13. 7. Darwinian psychodynamics and creativity • The interconnectivity of mental modules (transmodularity) enhances human creativity (Mithen 1996) • Being able to link up proper and actual modular domains (Sperber 1994) is an important adaptation • Paranoid schizophrenics are unable to discriminate between proper and actual domains of suspicion A Natural History of Paranoia

  14. Conclusion Meet some of evolutionary psychiatry’s models: • The distributional model (PPD, Delusional disorder,…) • The harmful dysfunction model (Schizophrenia,…) • The darwinian psychodynamics model (Paranoid schizophrenia, OCD,…) A Natural History of Paranoia

More Related