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Unpopular Opinion
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If I read your point 2 correctly, you are saying that some mental illness is just trauma response, and therefore isn't an "illness"?
How is that meaningful different from if I take a pipe and break someone's legs. It's clearly a response to (physical) trauma, and I think that we would all call that an illness, no?
I think they're emphasising that there are mental illnesses that are completely normal, and maybe even expected, when you take into account what's happening in the individuals life? I.E. chronic depression is the same as depression from when a loved one dies, but the latter is a natural response not caused by physical differences?
In your example, I think an injury would be the best descriptor.
But if we're talking about a child for instance who is suffering from mental illnesses brought on by repeated or extensive childhood trauma?
That might be most analogous to getting an infection after your legs are broken maybe? I think I'd consider it an illness, even if it's a purely cognitive response to extreme trauma in ones formative years.