I realize Seth has already pointed this out, but I'd like to confirm that there are in fact many insane people who are no threat to society, and only a threat to themselves in that they can't organize their thoughts well enough to take care of themselves.Schneibster wrote:At some point, people who are insane become a threat to themselves and society. Currently we determine this by noting that they've hurt or killed someone. This seems a bit callous to me. Apparently not to you.
You deeply and personally offend me, Schneibster, when you suggest otherwise. You are clearly ignorant, and, again, to use a term you'll understand, paranoid about a certain stripe of the mentally ill.
You've posted about "getting" these people tested and assessed. How would that happen? Who would do the testing and assessing? Who would be chosen to be subject to the tests? These are reasonable questions, and since there is historic precedent for governmental agencies to use processes like these to control their populace or strip them of civil rights, it is in no way paranoid or unreasonable to be wary of what you seem to suggest.
And if treatment is deemed necessary, but is not mandatory, how would prospective patients be encourage to accept therapy?
What reason do you have to believe that psychopathy is treatable by cognitive behavioral therapy?
I understand CBT helped you. Are you a psychopath? Do you have a brain similar to that of a psychopath?
I'll conclude by pointing out that it's entirely possible to respect the efficacy of psychology in the hands of certain practitioners, or certain brands of psychology, without embracing the entire discipline as a panacea to all mental problems.
I love therapy. But many psychologists are total quacks.