🧱 SECTION D — Theoretical Approaches (Green / Yellow / Red Audit)
(All items correspond to the theoretical approaches listed on the Psychiatry Wikipedia page.)
This is the most revealing section because it exposes the conceptual fragmentation of the field.
✅ GREEN — Substrate‑anchored, empirically constrained theoretical approaches#
These approaches are grounded in biology, physiology, or measurable mechanisms. They are not perfect, but they operate on real substrates.
Biomedical model#
- Treats mental conditions as disorders of brain structure/function.
- Anchored in neurobiology, pharmacology, genetics.
- Scientific substrate: measurable biological systems.
Biological psychiatry#
- Focuses on neurochemistry, neuroanatomy, genetics.
- Empirical methods, even if explanations are incomplete.
- Scientific substrate: brain tissue, receptors, circuits.
Behaviorism (strict, experimental form)#
- Based on observable behavior, learning theory, conditioning.
- Strong empirical tradition.
- Scientific substrate: measurable behavior and environmental contingencies.
Why these are green:
They operate on observable, measurable, falsifiable substrates — biology or behavior.
⚠️ YELLOW — Mixed validity, partially empirical, partially interpretive#
These approaches use some empirical findings but rely heavily on conceptual framing, clinician interpretation, or cultural assumptions.
Biopsychosocial model#
- Integrates biological, psychological, and social factors.
- Useful clinically, but too broad to be falsifiable.
- Scientific substrate: partial; mostly a meta‑framework.
Biocognitive model (McLaren)#
- Attempts to integrate biology with cognitive interpretation.
- Interesting but not widely validated.
- Scientific substrate: partial; conceptual.
Humanistic psychology#
- Emphasizes subjective experience, meaning, self‑actualization.
- Some empirical work, but largely interpretive.
- Scientific substrate: minimal; relies on phenomenology.
Narrative model#
- Focuses on personal stories, meaning‑making, identity.
- Clinically useful but not scientific.
- Scientific substrate: none; interpretive.
Why these are yellow:
They mix empirical insights with non‑falsifiable constructs, making them clinically flexible but scientifically weak.
❌ RED — Non‑scientific, mythic, or historically influential but unfalsifiable approaches#
These are not scientific theories. They are interpretive systems, narrative frameworks, or historical artifacts that persist due to tradition, training, or institutional inertia.
Psychoanalysis#
- Freud, Jung, Lacan, etc.
- Unfalsifiable, interpretive, culturally shaped.
- Scientific substrate: none.
Psychodynamic theory (modern variants)#
- Updated psychoanalysis; still interpretive.
- Scientific substrate: none.
Personality typologies (non‑validated)#
- Enneagram, MBTI, etc.
- Popular but not scientific.
- Scientific substrate: none.
“Chemical imbalance” theory#
- Debunked explanatory myth.
- Scientific substrate: none.
Evolutionary psychiatry (speculative forms)#
- Some grounded hypotheses, but many claims unfalsifiable.
- Scientific substrate: weak.
Why these are red:
They lack falsifiability, rely on narrative interpretation, and do not operate on measurable substrates.
🧩 Section D Structural Snapshot#
| Zone | What It Represents | Psychiatry’s Content Here |
|---|---|---|
| Green | Substrate‑anchored theories | Biomedical model, biological psychiatry, behaviorism |
| Yellow | Mixed empirical + interpretive | Biopsychosocial, biocognitive, humanistic, narrative |
| Red | Mythic, unfalsifiable, historical | Psychoanalysis, psychodynamics, typologies, imbalance theory |
This section exposes the core structural problem:
Psychiatry is not one theory — it is a stack of incompatible frameworks held together by institutional necessity.