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L. Malatesti et al. (eds.), Psychopathy, History, Philosophy and Theory of the
Life Sciences 27, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-82454-9_15
Chapter 15
Psychopathy and Personal Identity:
Implications for Medicalization
Marga Reimer
Abstract My aim in this chapter is to refect on psychopathy in connection with
personal identity to achieve clarity with respect to that condition’s potential for
medicalization. Given plausible (if theoretically thin) accounts of psychopathy, per-
sonal identity, and medicalization, I consider the question whether psychopathy is
amenable to medicalization. I argue that, not only is psychopathy not in fact ame-
nable to medicalization, it is not amenable to medicalization even in principle. In
the jargon of contemporary analytic philosophy, the medicalization of psychopathy
is not “logically” or “metaphysically” possible. Importantly, the operative notion of
medicalization refects contemporary Western society’s conception of medicine, a
conception which is subject to change, given relevant changes in that society’s
understanding of the scope and limits of medicine proper. It is possible that, given
conceptual changes of the relevant sort, psychopathy might prove amenable, at least
in principle, to medicalization. For this to occur, society would have to adopt a new
and radically different conception of medicine, one broadened so as to include, not
only the treatment of patients suffering from disease (illness, or disorder) but also
the transformation of patients (psychopaths) into literally different, or “numerically
distinct,” persons (non-psychopaths). However, given today’s societal conception of
medicine, which emphatically does not include the transformation, moral or other-
wise, of patients into literally different (or numerically distinct) persons, psychopa-
thy is not amenable to medicalization even in principle. It would thus be false, or at
the very least misleading, to claim today that psychopathy might “someday” be
medicalized.
Keywords Psychopathy · Personal identity · Medicalization, essential moral self
hypothesis · Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde · Person vs. human being
M. Reimer (*)
Department of Philosophy, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ, USA
e-mail: reimer@email.arizona.edu