There is absolutely no consensus on this issue within the psychological , psychiatric or philosophical communities. So you shouldn't take it as an empirical 'fact' but as a contested hypothesis. There was a time when cognitive therapy articulated reasoning within an rational-irrational binary, but they have mostly discarded this position in favor of seeing behavior as adaptive or unadaptive relative to one's own aims. In other words, depression not as false or irrational representations of an independently existing objective world, but depression as a failure to adaptively cope within one's own subjective world of aims and goals. Mindfulness approaches , which have gained in popularity recently, also take this non rationalistic view of depression. — Joshs
So, what do you think? Is there value in depression? Or do you believe it's more of a hindrance to life/philosophy? Is it necessary? — NKBJ
So, what do you think? Is there value in depression? Or do you believe it's more of a hindrance to life/philosophy? Is it necessary? — NKBJ
I would like to start a conversation discussing what the value of depression is, if it has any? — NKBJ
-Clinical depression: where depression inhibits an individual's ability to function
-Melancholy: a general feeling of sadness that doesn't interfere much with your life
-Grief: a sadness that comes from the loss of something or someone
-Weltschmerz: a sadness regarding the general state of the world
-Stress, illness, or otherwise physically induced depression
-Life changes: major life changes, even good ones, have been associated with depression— NKBJ
-Hormone-induced moodiness: all humans go through regular chemical fluctuations that can cause brief spouts of depression — NKBJ
depression as a failure to adaptively cope within one's own subjective world of aims and goals. — Joshs
Hormones are measurable: What hormones are chemically fluctuating (especially in males) that would account for depression? It seems like that would be the most easily detected cause of depression, but it doesn't seem to be (unless you are counting neurotransmitters as hormones). — Bitter Crank
Too many people are calling themselves depressed or are being diagnosed with depression and being given anti-depressants. — Bitter Crank
Frankly, I don't see any value whatsoever in conditions which depress normal functioning. The hallmarks of depression -- poor memory, perseveration, lack of concentration, sleep disturbance, irritability, dysphoria, etc. etc. -- don't seem like advantages for anything. — Bitter Crank
They need to get their lives straightened out. They need honest reality-based guidance (if they'll take it). They need debt relief. They need to get paid more for their work. They need better transit. They need better child care facilities while they are at work. They need ready access to consistent medical care. They need more affordable decent food. They need to stop drinking so much and using so many recreational drugs. — Bitter Crank
The prevailing view is that there is something wrong with people who are depressed, and that they are mentally ill. — Tzeentch
a hot cocoa — NKBJ
many bloody revolutions have been ignited by the melancholic. — TheMadFool
The current psychiatric method of treating depression seems to be just an ad-interim measure - staving off the serious consequences of depression - — TheMadFool
without any attempt to correct the larger causative social ills. — TheMadFool
The larger, causative social ills are going to require a revolution (literally, if not figuratively) to resolve. Who is going to do this? Everybody is going to do it because the problems are that big, or it isn't going to happen at all. — Bitter Crank
Some people are of the opinion that the problem of depression is of the mind (internal) and others say its the circumstances (external) — TheMadFool
that depression is nature's way of forcing a person to change certain beliefs about themselves, the world or reality at large and actions that may come from those beliefs. One has been "walking the wrong path" and nature is making one backtrack and realize they took a wrong turn somewhere. — Tzeentch
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