Author and psychotherapist, Dr. Farhad Dalal, recently published a book that critiques the philosophical and scientific bases of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT). Frequently upheld as an alternative to psychiatric drugs, CBT, according to Dalal’s investigation, is derived from the same flawed scientific and philosophical understandings that is less concerned with the origins of one’s distress, and more apt to reduce suffering to medicalized explanations and institutional treatments.
The book, titled “CBT: The Cognitive Behavioural Tsunami” examines the influences of managerialism, politics, and the corrupt science that endorses particular views and responses to human distress. The book’s introduction features the following statement:
“The rise of CBT has been fostered by neoliberalism and the phenomenon of New Public Management. The book not only critiques the science, psychology and philosophy of CBT, but also challenges the managerialist mentality and its hyper-rational understanding of ‘efficiency’, both of which are commonplace in organizational life today.”
“The book suggests that these are perverse forms of thought, which have been institutionalized by NICE and IAPT and used by them to generate narratives of CBT’s prowess. It claims that CBT is an exercise in symptom reduction which vastly exaggerates the degree to which symptoms are reduced, the durability of the improvement, as well as the numbers of people it helps.”