What was your view of human nature that let you take a fresh look at mental illness?
We started with the fairly standard evolutionary psychology view that the mind consists of a large stock of modules, each crafted by natural selection to do certain jobs. Our idea is that the mind is a set of structures with evolved functions and that mental illnesses can best be understood as failures of those structures. This is very different from the idea dominant in psychiatry, that mental illness is a brain disease. A lot of psychiatrists traffic in molecular explanations and tend to miss the cognitive picture of the flow of information between those modules.
How do these structures go wrong?
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Either something goes wrong with the system itself or a system that was functioning perfectly well ends up in an environment it wasnât designed for. Anxiety disorders and phobias look like good candidates for the second category. We know that we find some things very scary in the sense that we become frightened of them after minimal contact. And if you look at the way the phobias are listed in the psychiatristâs diagnostic bible, DSM [Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders], theyâre specific phobias about blood, heights, snakes and so on. The most common phobias do seem to map quite well onto fears that would have made perfect sense in our evolutionary past. And unlike other disorders, the form of the phobias fits the evolutionary functions quite well. So, for example, we faint in response to loss of blood: fainting prevents you going into shock because the physical system closes down.
What about when the systemâs gone wrong?
The mind will also have other general-purpose components, and there may be some very important disorders that we need to attribute to central reasoning systems. An example I like is the Capgras delusion, where people think that somebody close to them, usually a spouse, has been replaced by a replica. There are two problems here. First, thereâs something wrong with the face-recognition module: itâs giving you a match but not the emotional response that confirms this is your spouse, so the experience is of seeing an identical twin to your spouse. Thereâs also something wrong with the way these people are thinking. It may be that they have a higher upper boundary for permissible beliefs. That might help explain Cotardâs delusion, too, in which one forms the belief that one is dead. The big difficulty is that we donât understand central reasoning systems at all: some researchers believe they are beyond the reach of current science. If thatâs right then we canât have a good information-processing explanation of delusions or other irrational states â and a lot of psychiatry will struggle to advance much beyond its present state.
Where does all this leave DSM?
DSM is designed to be atheoretical. It doesnât talk about causal theories of particular disorders. It doesnât say that there isnât a theory of what a mental disorder is, but it is designed to avoid causal theories. People sometimes use the phrase âChinese-menu approachâ to characterise DSM: to meet a certain diagnosis, you have to have two symptoms from list A, two out of four from list A, three out of six from list B plus either C or D, and so on. I think that philosophy of science suggests that you really canât have a satisfactory classification without it being based on some causal understanding of what youâre classifying.
It sounds almost like medieval taxonomyâŚ
Yes. All those lists! Itâs also a document written by dozens of semi-autonomous committees, each dealing with a particular condition and none of them worrying about the big picture. Itâs not clear that the pieces even fit together terribly well. As a scientific document, DSM might be better off ignoring traditional or common-sense views about what a mental disorder is and looking to the other sciences of the mind for a guide to mental functioning. Then you could have a document that details all the ways our mind/brain can break down, including disorders of the visual system, all the agnosias and so on. But theyâre not considered âmentalâ illnesses by psychiatrists! These false distinctions result from the divorce between psychiatry and neuroscience. This is why weâve tried to produce a cognitive neuroscience approach that has an evolutionary interpretation â and to apply it consistently.
At least that provides a theoretical framework.
Thatâs right. You shouldnât expect this approach to have an enormous short-term impact on psychiatry, but itâs interesting that Chris Frith at the Institute of Neurology in London and other people in the US are working on models of schizophrenia in which the cognitive neuroscience approach to information-processing malfunctions is increasingly important. And there are interesting cognitive theories based on the idea that panic disorder is a misinterpretation of bodily sensations. Hence when you stand up too quickly you get that characteristic head spinning, and you interpret this as a symbol of imminent disaster â Iâm about to die or Iâm going crazy.
Will some mental illnesses âdisappearâ?
Take personality disorders. Some research suggests these are the result of people being âdesignedâ to be antisocial or manipulative, and that in a game-theory approach to evolution, if enough people are behaving ânormallyâ there might be a niche for antisocial, histrionic individuals to exploit other people or treat them selfishly or indifferently to gain advantage. If that is right, then we have to say that although these people are hell, thereâs nothing wrong with them. Antisocial personality disorder in particular is probably overdiagnosed. People who work with psychopaths complain that this diagnosis doesnât distinguish between career criminals and young guys who join a gang â and a hard core of genuine psychopaths or sociopaths who are designed to be this way.
Might they have been more adapted at another time in our evolutionary history?
They might, though they might be well adapted to larger, more anonymous, contemporary societies. A lot turns on whether there are many successful psychopaths or sociopaths out there who donât come to the attention of the courts or the health services. The psychopaths we know about tend to be very impulsive and self-destructive and often spend their reproductive years incarcerated, which is the big problem for this view. But many researchers, including ones who donât take an evolutionary line, think there might be rational and successful psychopaths in the general population. Hervey Cleckleyâs The Mask of Sanity was the standard text on psychopathy for years. Cleckley included in his case studies the psychopath as scientist, the psychopath as physician, the psychopath as psychiatrist, the psychopath as man of the world, and so on. He thought there was a genuine psychopathic type and that you had to look carefully to watch the mask slip occasionally. If you apply our concept of mental illness then these people are functioning as Mother Nature intended because Mother Nature intended them to be bastards!