Depression, bipolar disorder, and OCD are examples of the kind of mental 
illnesses I had in mind.  They make life hard for those that have it.  More 
downsides than upsides.   As for sociopathy, for most people, just being too 
damned irritating will eventually create a cost for them too.   Others become 
the president, at least for a while.

From: Friam <[email protected]> on behalf of Steven A Smith 
<[email protected]>
Reply-To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group <[email protected]>
Date: Wednesday, January 2, 2019 at 12:47 PM
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Statistical poser (aka fact checking is hard)


It is to this point that I prefer to think in terms of "neurodiverse" rather 
than "mentally ill".   Your definitions here respond more to my idea of 
"sociopathy".    I don't think of sociopaths as being mentally ill, just not 
good members of the society they find themselves in.   Most *L*ibertarians I 
know seem to be on the verge of sociopathy as a matter of honor.

There has been a move afoot to recognize the selection value of neurodiversity 
in a group and to de-stigmatize or de-pathologize what was previously 
considered dis-ease or dys-function.

https://www.nytimes.com/2015/08/23/books/review/neurotribes-by-steve-silberman.html
On 1/2/19 12:33 PM, Marcus Daniels wrote:
Nick writes:

“A mentally ill individual is one whose behavior is so annoying that other 
individuals are willing to cooperate to put him away?”

Sure, in that case the “mentally ill individual” may have failed to connect 
their actions with the consequences.   Or maybe they wanted lodging in a 
psychiatric facility on the family dime -- probably a bad call if your name was 
Rosemary Kennedy.

Marcus

From: Friam <[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]> on 
behalf of Nick Thompson 
<[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]>
Reply-To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group 
<[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]>
Date: Wednesday, January 2, 2019 at 12:15 PM
To: 'The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group' 
<[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Statistical poser (aka fact checking is hard)

Marcus,

Forgive me if I am entering this party late, but what exactly means “mental 
illness”

I would expect that mental illness is massively underdiagnosed in this country, 
and especially in the blue collar mid-west where it is considered a taboo topic 
and people have not had adequate health insurance to use to diagnose it.

So, is a young person who hears voices, but who integrates those voices into a 
well-organized and effective life mentally ill?  Is the homeless person who 
prefers to sleep on a subway grate than go into a shelter mentally ill? I had a 
colleague once who famously checked himself into a mental hospital making a 
vague claim to hearing voices and then, once on the ward, behaved absolutely as 
he would have otherwise.  His only aberrant behavior was that he constantly 
took notes.  Explaining that he was doing a study of the ward.  When, after a 
few weeks, he got bored of it and tried to check himself out, he could not get 
out!  He had to use his “fail-safe” (the chairman of his department, if I 
remember) to extract himself.  Was he mentally ill?

Is trump mentally Ill?  WAS he mentally ill before he became president?  Or was 
he promoted to his level of mental illness. (CF, Peter 
Principle.)<https://www.amazon.co.uk/Peter-Principle-Things-Always-Wrong/dp/0285631764>
  (In a political hierarchy a politician will rise to his level of insanity.) 
(cf, All the Kings 
Men<https://www.amazon.com/s?ie=UTF8&field-keywords=All%20the%20kings%20men&index=blended&link_code=qs&sourceid=Mozilla-search&tag=mozilla-20>,
 a fabulous novel, by the way).  Not clear to me how a libertarian of any 
stripe can allow the concept of mental illness into a conversation.  A mentally 
ill individual is one whose behavior is so annoying that other individuals are 
willing to cooperate to put him away?

Nick

Nicholas S. Thompson
Emeritus Professor of Psychology and Biology
Clark University
http://home.earthlink.net/~nickthompson/naturaldesigns/

From: Friam [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Marcus Daniels
Sent: Wednesday, January 02, 2019 11:44 AM
To: The Friday Morning Applied Complexity Coffee Group 
<[email protected]><mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [FRIAM] Statistical poser (aka fact checking is hard)

Robert writes:

“Estimates vary by source, but fraction of opioid deaths that are suicide is 
around 20-30%”

What I’d really like to know is how the fraction of opioid deaths occur with 
individuals that have no historical sign of mental illness at all, and would be 
described by their friends and colleagues as effective and engaged prior to 
their initial prescription.   I would expect that mental illness is massively 
underdiagnosed in this country, and especially in the blue collar mid-west 
where it is considered a taboo topic and people have not had adequate health 
insurance to use to diagnose it.    I strongly suspect a structural cause of 
all this is the idea that free will exists, combined with the inevitable 
evolution of the economy toward more automation.   Millions of people, maybe 
hundreds of millions of people, have what amounts to a mistaken view of the 
world.   Similar arguments apply to the ongoing outbursts of gun homicide 
(instead of suicide).

Marcus



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