by davep » Tue 02 Jan 2007, 20:23:50
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Depression can be caused by many things. Simplistic causality is too easy IMO. Mixing abused and neglected children seems sloppy and non-scientific to me.
I'm not sure if this is what you're implying here ("
many things"), but it is a mistake to view depressed feelings or even severely depressed feelings as a 'disease'. There is no reason to define grief, dejection, or melancholia as a 'disease' simply because it is severe or lasting. in psychiatry, few, fi any of the problems labeled depression are proven to originate in the brain and depression is never defined by an objective physical finding, such as a blood test or brain scan. Attempts have been made to find physical markers for depression, the equivalent of lab tests that indicate liver disease or a recent heart attack. Despite decades of research, thousands of research studies, and hundreds of millions of dollars in expense, no marker for depression has been found.
I was depressed when I first learned of peak oil; my mom died; I got a B in organic chemistry; my wife told me to go fuck myself; my kid was sick for a week with an unknown ailment; GWB became president; my tax bill came due; my penis shrunk in 20 below zero; Larry Kudlow speaks; I broke my ankle; I lost my job; my cat got run over by a car; Muhammad Ali lost his title to Joe Frazier; watching my fellow man make an everyday ass of himself; when I grew up an discovered the world around me; etc, etc, etc.
Depression is as common as the air we inhale, the dirt we walk on, the water we drink. In the words of Patrick Swayze, pain don't hurt. Whiskey was invented for a reason other than its bitter taste , you know.
I was explaining that depression has myriad forms and that causality should not be assumed through a flawed approach. I don't see it as a disease either, although in some cases it does need treatment analogous to a disiease, if only to avoid more serious consequences for the individual concerned.