Review of Reconceptualizing Mental Illness in the Digital Age
Posted: 10 Nov 2021, 16:52
[Following is an official OnlineBookClub.org review of "Reconceptualizing Mental Illness in the Digital Age" by Elliott B. Martin, Jr..]
Elliott B. Martin, Jr. is the author of Reconceptualizing Mental Illness in the Digital Age. This is a book that is well described by its title. Martin is a psychiatrist and an ancient language specialist.
Martin tries to educate people with this book. He wrote about several issues related to mental illness, such as identity, suicide, the media (the swarm), Donald Trump's hair (although humorous, he used this to address specific issues regarding the media and the Internet), and many others. Being an ancient language specialist, he also included a bit of history into the mix.
This book contained a lot of personal opinions from the author, alongside some scientifically researched ideas too. It also included references to the information source of some of the written text. Furthermore, the book talks about substance addiction. It explains that some people use alcohol to cope with suicidal thoughts.
I adore this book for its in-depth look at things. It touches on these matters with a profound look beyond the surface. I often appreciated the author's perspective on what he wrote about and how he surprised me with some of the facts he wrote into the book. I found this book quite astounding.
This book is quite good, although it is not exactly the best book around. In several instances, I found the author's writing style very annoying. The author really got on my nerves many times with the way he expressed his ideas. I got confused so many times and had to read through several sentences multiple times.
"As one who has studied the earliest extant written languages it has been my experience, if not yet firm conclusion, drawn from observation and a fair to middling intellect-rather than from review of nonsensical 'randomized clinical trials-that early texts carry a certain pure fascination value, a curiosity, if nothing else, by virtue of their age and utter foreignness." I quoted this from the book to demonstrate the point I made earlier. Besides the punctuation error, this sentence is so unnecessarily confusing and complicated. I had to read it multiple times to understand the message being passed across. However, the problem was not just this sentence. Many more sentences had a similar confusing nature, just like this one. In fact, the following sentence immediately after this one was only slightly better than this one. This was very annoying and made it hard to understand the book.
I recommend this book to intellectuals who have the patience to read through it. Reading this book was really tasking and required patience due to the author's writing style. I did not appreciate this. Although the book had a couple of interesting points, it often got boring, which made me conclude that it is for people interested in the subject academically. I think the book is also suitable for people studying psychology. Having laid these points down, I have to rate this book 2 out of 4 stars.
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Reconceptualizing Mental Illness in the Digital Age
View: on Bookshelves | on Amazon
Elliott B. Martin, Jr. is the author of Reconceptualizing Mental Illness in the Digital Age. This is a book that is well described by its title. Martin is a psychiatrist and an ancient language specialist.
Martin tries to educate people with this book. He wrote about several issues related to mental illness, such as identity, suicide, the media (the swarm), Donald Trump's hair (although humorous, he used this to address specific issues regarding the media and the Internet), and many others. Being an ancient language specialist, he also included a bit of history into the mix.
This book contained a lot of personal opinions from the author, alongside some scientifically researched ideas too. It also included references to the information source of some of the written text. Furthermore, the book talks about substance addiction. It explains that some people use alcohol to cope with suicidal thoughts.
I adore this book for its in-depth look at things. It touches on these matters with a profound look beyond the surface. I often appreciated the author's perspective on what he wrote about and how he surprised me with some of the facts he wrote into the book. I found this book quite astounding.
This book is quite good, although it is not exactly the best book around. In several instances, I found the author's writing style very annoying. The author really got on my nerves many times with the way he expressed his ideas. I got confused so many times and had to read through several sentences multiple times.
"As one who has studied the earliest extant written languages it has been my experience, if not yet firm conclusion, drawn from observation and a fair to middling intellect-rather than from review of nonsensical 'randomized clinical trials-that early texts carry a certain pure fascination value, a curiosity, if nothing else, by virtue of their age and utter foreignness." I quoted this from the book to demonstrate the point I made earlier. Besides the punctuation error, this sentence is so unnecessarily confusing and complicated. I had to read it multiple times to understand the message being passed across. However, the problem was not just this sentence. Many more sentences had a similar confusing nature, just like this one. In fact, the following sentence immediately after this one was only slightly better than this one. This was very annoying and made it hard to understand the book.
I recommend this book to intellectuals who have the patience to read through it. Reading this book was really tasking and required patience due to the author's writing style. I did not appreciate this. Although the book had a couple of interesting points, it often got boring, which made me conclude that it is for people interested in the subject academically. I think the book is also suitable for people studying psychology. Having laid these points down, I have to rate this book 2 out of 4 stars.
******
Reconceptualizing Mental Illness in the Digital Age
View: on Bookshelves | on Amazon