%0 Journal Article %T What makes ˇ°a mental illness?ˇ± What makes ˇ°a new mental illnessˇ±?: The cases of solastalgia and hubris syndrome. %A Seamus P MacSuibhne %J Cosmos and History : the Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy %D 2009 %I Cosmos and History Publishing Co-op. %X What is a ˇ°mental illnessˇ±? What is an ˇ°illnessˇ±? What does the description and classification of ˇ°mental illnessesˇ± actually involve, and is the description of ˇ°newˇ± mental illnesses description of actually existing entities, or the creation of them? ˇ°Solastalgiaˇ± is a neologism, invented by the Australian environmental philosopher Glenn Albrecht, to give greater meaning and clarity to psychological distress caused by environmental change (Albrecht et al 2007) The concept received some coverage in the international mass media in late 2007 (Thompson, 2007) Much of this described solastalgia as ˇ°a new concept in mental illnessˇ±, a description endorsed by Albrecht himself. The doctor and former British Foreign Secretary, Lord Owen, has coined the phrase ˇ°hubris syndromeˇ± to describe the mindset of prime ministers and presidents whose behaviour is characterised by reckless, hubristic belief in their own rightness. This paper uses both the concept of solastalgia and the related concepts Albrecht posited of psychoterratic and somaterratic illnesses and hubris syndrome as a starting point to explore issues around the meaning of mental illness, and what it means to describe and classify mental illness. These issues illustrated tensions between natural and social philosophy, with the nature and status of psychiatry as a scientific, ˇ°value-freeˇ± enterprise or a humanistic, ˇ°value-ladenˇ± one discussed. Should ˇ°the distress caused by environmental changeˇ± be deemed a mental illness? Could it thereby included in catalogues of mental illnesses such as DSM-IV and ICD-10? The process whereby the psychiatric establishment defines and categorises mental illness is described, and as well as examining whether solastalgia and hubris syndrome meets these criteria, those criteria are compared to more critical views of psychiatry and the nature of mental illness. %K mental illness %K phenomenology of mental illness %K health %K disease %K illness %K Canguilhem %K Szasz %K Fulford %K Boorse %K solastalgia %K hubris syndrome %U http://www.cosmosandhistory.org/index.php/journal/article/view/143