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  Vol. 41 No. 2, February 1984 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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The Evolutionary Model of Psychiatric Disorder

John S. Price, DM, MRCP, FRCPsych
Milton Keynes Hospital Standing Way Milton Keynes MK6 5AZ England

Leon Sloman, MRCS, FRCP(C)
Clarke Institute of Psychiatry 250 College St Toronto. Ontario. Canada M5T 1R8

Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1984;41(2):211.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

To the Editor.—

Gardner, in his article "Mechanisms in Manic-Depressive Disorder: An Evolutionary Model," in the ARCHIVES,1 delineates how an evolutionary model could contribute to an understanding of psychiatric disorder. Our purpose in writing is to emphasize the broad scope and value of this approach. Our own studies of depression from the functional, evolutionary point of view have increasingly drawn us to models that depict depression as intimately concerned with social competition,2,3 and it is into this social competition category of model that the social hierarchy model proposed by Gardner falls. The evolution of the depressive response depends on the fact that competitive behavior has been ritualized, and the function of depression is to provide the social incapacity that would otherwise be provided by physical incapacity or death. This incapacity or yielding behavior extends in time the result of competition so that adjustment may be made to a . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]



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