ABSTRACT

When it was first published in 1980, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Third Edition—univer-sally known as DSM-III—embodied a radical new method for identifying psychiatric illness. Kirk and Kutchins challenge the general understanding about the research data and the pro-cess that led to the peer acceptance of DSM-III. Their original and controversial reconstruction of that moment concen-trates on how a small group of researchers interpreted their findings about a specific problem—psychiatric reliability—to promote their beliefs about mental illness and to challenge the then-dominant Freudian paradigm.

chapter |16 pages

Psychiatric Diagnosis and the New Bible

chapter |30 pages

The Social Control of Error

chapter |44 pages

Making a Manual

chapter |12 pages

A Careful Look at the Field Trials

chapter |38 pages

The Art of Claim-Making

chapter |20 pages

Securing Diagnostic Turf

chapter |30 pages

The Social Context of Diagnostic Error