Marxist scientists Richard Levins and Richard Lewontin said, “nothing evokes as much hostility… as the suggestion that social forces influence or even dictate either the scientific method or the facts and theories of science." But it is in this illusion of non-ideological objectivity where ideology can be seen to be the most entrenched, functioning as unknown knowns, that is, as unrecognized assumptions or inherent biases which mediate how scientists approach the world. [...]

[S]tudies have shown that “within a given location, those with the lowest incomes are typically 1.5 to 3 times more likely than the rich to experience depression or anxiety.” The plethora of factors that stem from and contribute to poverty has allowed researchers to establish “a bidirectional causal relationship between poverty and mental illness,” [...]

“[C]hemical imbalances” don’t arise out of a void but are produced by the concrete environment the individual is in. The point, again, is not to diminish the biochemical in order to elevate the role of the environment, but to see both the biochemical and the environment as dialectically interconnected, acting “upon each other through the medium of the [individual].” [...]

It is much easier to reduce depression to a biochemical phenomenon in the brain than to analyze how the social relations prevalent in the capitalist mode of life create the conditions for the emergence of depression. Similarly, once this reduction is established, it is much easier to treat the “solution” through individualized drug consumption than through socially organized revolutionary activity. [...]

Tracing depression to the exploitative and alienating relations sustained between people and their work, their peers, and nature, is not only a much more laborious task, but one which would necessarily end in the realization of the systemic root of the problem. [...]

Cuban scientists see mental health issues and treatment “within the context of the community,” not isolated individuals. [...] This socialist model has afforded the Cuban people the conditions where, despite the enormous material difficulties created by the US blockade, depression in Cuba affects only 3.8 percent of the population, whereas in the United States 4.8 percent.

  • shath [comrade/them]
    ·
    2 years ago

    so ur saying material conditions has an effect on someones mental health and ssris only make that easier to deal with? :surprised-pika:

  • LiberalSocialist [any,they/them]
    ·
    2 years ago

    The article, I think, confuses two issues.

    Firstly, I'll point to the part I agree with - The biochemical reductionist view of mental illness, that says serotonin deficiency (and its interactions with other chemicals) is what causes depression, and thus, SSRIs can cure the disease, is obviously one that suits the pharmaceutical capitalists the most. They do everything in their power to suppress the relationship between our environment and surroundings (which is shaped by capitalism) and our mental state. Thus, their solutions (anti-depressants) can only ever cure the symptoms, and can never fully cure the society of depression.

    Yeah.

    But the other major point the article claims is that, based on a recent meta-analysis, the Serotonin theory is a failed theory. I.e., serotonin deficiency is not what causes depression. The author instead claims depression is completely a result of capitalism (and specifically neoliberalism). This claim is completely at odds with the dialectical approach between our biochemistry and our socioeconomic conditions which the author centers throughout the article.

    It is clear from the article that the author believes in the latter, the dialectical relationship, but as the very first claim of the article is that serotonin is not the cause of depression, the environment remains as the only factor. Which begs the question, even if the environment is the primary cause, what are the changes in our brain as a result of the environment that lead to depression? Not every person in a messed up situation is depressed. And not every person who's depressed is in a messed up situation.

    Thus, automatically, biochemistry comes back into the picture once again.

    I think, personally, it would've been much better if the author stayed away from the recent meta-analysis completely (except perhaps as a footnote or addendum). Keep the focus on the dialectical relationship between biochemistry and our environment, and show how the focus on the former has only made the pharmaceutical companies billions of dollars while more and more people continue suffering from depression. How Cuba has rejected that reductionist view and has become a leading figure in mental health. Those parts of the article are all very well-done. So, uh, good job.

    • ButtBidet [he/him]
      ·
      2 years ago

      The author instead claims depression is completely a result of capitalism (and specifically neoliberalism).

      The article definitely didn't say that.

    • Parzivus [any]
      ·
      2 years ago

      Well, the article is saying that serotonin deficiency is not the cause, which is reasonable. It is not saying that chemical/genetic factors are not at play, or that SSRIs are totally ineffective.

  • happybadger [he/him]
    ·
    2 years ago

    Marxist scientists Richard Levins and Richard Lewontin

    Read The Dialectical Biologist and Biology Under the Influence. Both are such good Marxist philosophy of science books.

    • infuziSporg [e/em/eir]
      ·
      2 years ago

      Biology as Ideology is a splendid lecture series as well. I feel like those 4 hours could have saved me from a whole lot of delusion if I'd listened to it 7 years earlier.

  • kristina [she/her]
    ·
    2 years ago

    ssris never did jack shit for me. sleep meds, on the other hand, have helped me a ton. just a little something ive learned about myself.

    • TerminalEncounter [she/her]
      ·
      2 years ago

      Number one treatment for mood disorders is a regular sleep and food schedule, or it should be. Not everyone can get those though.

      • kristina [she/her]
        ·
        2 years ago

        yeah my ptsd gives me some absolutely insane nightmares so being able to just knock myself out is for the better

        i even get lucid dreams but i use the opportunity to torture myself :yea:

  • ButtBidet [he/him]
    ·
    2 years ago

    For someone who's been "depressed" his whole life, and who's been pigeonholed into "chemical imbalance", I was depressed because I was being bullied and ignored, not because of my brain.

  • flowernet [none/use name]
    ·
    2 years ago

    subjectively, I'm inclined to agree; it's not necessarily that Seratonin is the issue, but that SSRIs can cause a sudden change in consciousness that makes the person open to changes. That can also explain why general psychedlics like Psilocybin and Ketamine show such impressive results at treating depression. I credit turning my life around from depression to having a pretty large dose of THC one time. as a counter point though, there are lots of people who abuse those same substances and are still depressed.

  • thirstywizard [he/him]
    ·
    2 years ago

    Checks out. Sagan was very, very lib (and wrote a lot of shit against dialectics being a super lib academic and tbh not knowing what the word meant) but he wrote something in Demon Haunted World about good science requiring certain conditions to flourish, that's fast diminishing in the west with how money-politics and funding for research structured.

    Sociologists, psychologists, some psychiatrists, and others like using 'shit life syndrome' as a catch all for one's conditions, like being in crippling poverty or homeless and such, being contributive toward mental illnesses. We can't escape our environment, biologists of all stripes should know this innately.

  • Straight_Depth [they/them]
    ·
    2 years ago

    On a quick read-through of the article, if depression is not solely as a result of the chemical meme of the brain, then exactly what is depression? What is happening in the brain that's causing someone to seriously consider self-harm or withdraw from life entirely? I will accept that material and environmental influences can cause or exacerbate depression and low mood, but ultimately the brain is still an electrochemical machine whose chemistry is determined by material factors, including genetics. If it's not a lack of serotonin, then is it another brain chemical? Is it something metaphysical? Just doesn't seem all that scientific. Depression has multiple, extremely complex and interlinked "causes", some people don't even know that they're depressed at all. Some of these cause are material, related to poverty, systemic oppression, etc, but sometimes they're caused by grief, loss, bereavement - material to an extent, but no amount of socialism will bring back one's dead relative.

    This further raises the question about the cases of depression where antidepressants did result in an improvement in mood and outcomes, so unless we're going to reclassify all these cases as the result of a placebo effect, then we have to acknowledge that serotonin and the drugs that affect its levels do have some degree of efficacy.

    What's actually happening in the brain to cause depression?

  • sadchip [he/him]
    ·
    edit-2
    2 years ago

    I didn't actually read this article, but I seem to recall that the meta-analysis study they reference at the beginning being shady. I'm lazy right now and don't feel like digging too much, but I remember the authors of that paper using shoddy evidence to argue against the use of SSRI's and other anti-depressents.

    • mazdak
      ·
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      deleted by creator

    • The_Dawn [fae/faer, des/pair]
      ·
      2 years ago

      There has been no proof that serotonin is linked to depression, and even before this particular study dropped, there's been deep suspicions in the field from scientists who aren't pharma shills. you should really read the article. also definitely reject "I'M a REAL scientist, and here's why Study That Says Society Is Bad Somewhat is actually fake and bad science; a thread" twitter posts

      • sadchip [he/him]
        ·
        edit-2
        2 years ago

        I read the meta analysis study when it came out and remember finding it of poor quality. I also remember reading multiple arguments against it that I found valid (on Reddit /r/science not Twitter thank you very much :soviet-huff: ). I may very well be completely wrong I just thought I'd share from memory.

    • sadchip [he/him]
      ·
      2 years ago

      Ok I guess that's the point of this article as well.

      • TankieTanuki [he/him]
        hexagon
        ·
        2 years ago

        This article presented the meta-analysis as rather authoritative.

        [T]he explosion the recent study caused is a result of its comprehensive character as an “umbrella review” which examined all parts of the serotonin hypothesis at once—and in doing so, went well beyond the many studies which have focused on separate parts in the last couple of decades.

        I haven't read the paper but I would be interested to know if that's not the case.

        I have found SSRIs to be helpful in my mental health treatment and plan to continue taking them, so I'm not anti-pill. I like the way Mark Fisher framed it: depression is materially rooted and chemically instantiated. Drugs are a valid and useful tool for treating the problem (i.e. a crutch to support you in the hellscape) but they aren't the root cure.

        This is still probably reductive but I can see three groups of thought:

        1. Depression is caused by a chemical imbalance and cured with drugs

        2. Depression is caused by capitalism and drugs can treat but not cure it

        3. Depression is caused by capitalism and taking the pharma company's pill will only enslave you to the system

        I happen to be in camp 2.

        • LiberalSocialist [any,they/them]
          ·
          2 years ago
          1. Depression is caused by a chemical imbalance that may or may not itself be caused by the environment (or the capitalist system). It may be cured (or, at least, alleviated) with drugs and/or might require broader environmental changes (personal or societal) to fully resolve.
          • TankieTanuki [he/him]
            hexagon
            ·
            2 years ago
            1. Depression can only cured by completing the evolution to crab. :sicko-crab:
            spoiler

            You may be right. That's a good take. I'm just trying to goof around, not dunk on you, comrade. :meow-hug:

          • machiabelly [she/her]
            ·
            2 years ago

            4 isn't an actual position. Everyone in all the other 3 camps would agree with that. You can't use your statement to inform any treatment that the others wouldn't. camp one will say that its all meditation, exercise, and SSRIs, which 4 agrees with. Camp two will say the same except that societal and communal factors are extremely important which 4 agrees with. And camp 3 will say that SSRIs don't work and that its all just societal factors, which 4 agrees with.

            4 is a summation of the question that everyone is trying to answer. Everyone is trying to prioritize all these different factors and find out which ones truly have a causal relationship between them and depression.

        • mazdak
          ·
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          deleted by creator

        • happyandhappy [she/her]
          ·
          edit-2
          2 years ago

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDhqTf5eJH4

          theory of congruent depression vs clinical depression prob encompasses all 3 of these