Thomas Szasz Quote

For millennia, the dialectic of vilification and deification and, more generally, of invalidation and validation—excluding the individual from the group as an evil outsider or including him in it as a member in good standing—was cast in the imagery and rhetoric of magic and religion.... With the decline of the religious world view and the ascent of the scientific method during the Renaissance and the Enlightenment, the religious rhetoric of validation and invalidation was gradually replaced by the scientific. One of the most dramatic results of this transformation is the lexicon of psychiatric diagnoses functioning as a powerful, but largely unacknowledged, rhetoric of rejection and stigmatization.


"The Sane Slave: Social Control and Legal Psychiatry," American Criminal Law Review, vol. 10 (1971), p. 333.


For millennia, the dialectic of vilification and deification and, more generally, of invalidation and validation—excluding the individual from the...

For millennia, the dialectic of vilification and deification and, more generally, of invalidation and validation—excluding the individual from the...

For millennia, the dialectic of vilification and deification and, more generally, of invalidation and validation—excluding the individual from the...

For millennia, the dialectic of vilification and deification and, more generally, of invalidation and validation—excluding the individual from the...