CINXE.COM
multiple personality disorder or dissociative identity disorder - The Skeptic's Dictionary - Skepdic.com
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> <head> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" /> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="_style/style.css" /> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="_style/printstyle.css" media="print"/> <link rel="shortcut icon" href="s1.ico"> <script>(function(d, s, id) { var js, fjs = d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0]; if (d.getElementById(id)) return; js = d.createElement(s); js.id = id; js.src = "//connect.facebook.net/en_US/sdk.js#xfbml=1&version=v2.0"; fjs.parentNode.insertBefore(js, fjs); }(document, 'script', 'facebook-jssdk'));</script> <!-- Go to www.addthis.com/dashboard to customize your tools --> <script type="text/javascript" src="//s7.addthis.com/js/300/addthis_widget.js#pubid=ra-5487a05a7e027f30" async="async"></script> <!--[if IE]> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="_style/style.css" /> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="_style/printstyle.css" media="print"/> <![endif]--> <title>multiple personality disorder or dissociative identity disorder - The Skeptic's Dictionary - Skepdic.com</title> <style type="text/css"> <!-- .style14 { font-size: 14px; font-weight: bold; } .style15 {font-size: large} --> </style> </head> <body><br /> <div class="container"> <div class="header"> <div class="logo"> <img src="_images/logo_01.png" alt="The Skeptic's Dictionary" width="270" height="60" border="0" /> <br /> by <a href="http://skepdic.com/refuge/bio.html">Robert Todd Carroll</a> * est. 1994 </div> <div class="slogan"> <img src="_images/slogan_01.gif" alt="A Collection of Strange Beliefs, Amusing Deceptions, and Dangerous Delusions" width="362" height="30" /> </div> </div> <div class="menu"> <ul> <li></li><li><a href="http://skepdic.com/">Home</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/news/">Newsletter</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/feedback.html">Feedback</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/faq.html">FAQ & Interviews</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/tour.html">Site Map</a></li> </ul> </div> <div class="middle"> <div class="left"> <h2>Topical Indexes</h2> <ul class="nav_1"> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/tialtmed.html">Alternatives to Medicine</a></li> <li> <a href="http://skepdic.com/ticriticalthinking.html">Critical Thinking</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/ticrypto.html">Cryptozoology</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/tialien.html">ETs & UFOs</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/tifraud.html">Frauds, Hoaxes, Conspiracies</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/tijunk.html">Junk Science</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/tilogic.html">Logic & Perception</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/tinewage.html">New Age</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/tipara.html">Paranormal</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/tiscience.html">Science & Philosophy</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/tisuper.html">Supernatural</a></li> <li> </li> </ul> <h2>Other Writings</h2> <ul class="nav_2"> <li> <a href="http://59ways.blogspot.com/"> Unnatural Acts blog</a></li><li> <a href="http://skepdic.com/skeptimedia/skeptimediaarchive.html"> Skeptimedia</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/refuge/funkarchive.html"> Mass Media Funk</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/refuge/bunkarchive.html"> Mass Media Bunk</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/refuge/harmarchive.html"> What's the Harm?</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/news/">Newsletter Archives</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/refuge/wwwbunk.html"> Internet Bunk</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/refuge/2good.html"> Too good to be true</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/refuge/essays.html"> Skeptical Essays</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/refuge/randr.html"> Book Reviews</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/refuge/suburbanmyths.html"> Suburban Myths</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/refuge/memoriam.html"> In Memoriam</a></li><li></li> </ul> <h2>Other Resources</h2> <ul class="nav_3"> <li><a href="http://sd4kids.skepdic.com"> Mysteries and Science for Kids</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/hollow.html">A Skeptic's Halloween</a></li> <li> <a href="http://renish.skepdic.com/AllNotes.html">Editor's Notes</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/refuge/getinvolved.html"> Get involved</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/future.html">Future Topics?</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/permissions.html"> Permission to print</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/report/">Site Statistics</a></li><li></li> </ul> </div> <div class="content"> <div class="it"> <h2>From Abracadabra to Zombies<span class="small"> | <a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html">View All</a></span></h2> <ul class="alphabet"> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#A">a</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#B">b</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#C">c</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#D">d</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#E">e</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#F">f</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#G">g</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#H">h</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#I">i</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#J">j</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#K">k</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#L">l</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#M">m</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#N">n</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#O">o</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#P">p</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#Q">q</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#R">r</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#S">s</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#T">t</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#U">u</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#V">v</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#W">w</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#X">x</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#Y">y</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#Z">z</a></li> </ul> <webContent><h1>multiple personality disorder <br> [dissociative identity disorder]</h1> <blockquote> <span class="quote">....students often ask me whether multiple personality disorder (MPD) really exists. I usually reply that the symptoms attributed to it are as genuine as hysterical paralysis and seizures....</span><br> --Dr. Paul McHugh </blockquote> <p style="text-align: left"> <font face="Arial" size="3">Multiple personality disorder (MPD) is a psychiatric</font><img src="graphics/hydrat.jpg" alt="hydrat.jpg (5717 bytes)" align="right" style="float: right" width="103" height="147"><font face="Arial" size="3"> disorder characterized by having at least one "alter" personality that controls behavior. The "alters" are said to occur spontaneously and involuntarily, and function more or less independently of each other. The unity of consciousness, by which we identify our selves, is said to be absent in MPD. Another symptom of MPD is significant amnesia which can't be explained by ordinary forgetfulness. In 1994, the American Psychiatric Association's DSM-IV replaced the designation of MPD with DID: <em> <a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20011024031223/http:/www.sidran.org/didbr.html">dissociative identity disorder</a></em>. The label may have changed, but the list of symptoms remained essentially the same.</font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Memory and other aspects of consciousness are said to be divided up among "alters" in the MPD. The number of "alters" identified by various therapists ranges from several to tens to hundreds. There are even some reports of several thousand identities dwelling in one person. There does not seem to be any consensus among therapists as to what an "alter" is. Yet, there is general agreement that the cause of MPD is repressed memories of childhood sexual abuse. The evidence for this claim has been challenged, however, and there are very few reported cases of MPD afflicting children.</font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Psychologist Nicholas P. Spanos argues that repressed memories of childhood abuse and multiple personality disorder are "rule-governed social constructions established, legitimated, and maintained through social interaction." In short, Spanos argues that most cases of MPD have been created by therapists with the cooperation of their patients and the rest of society. The experts have created both the disease and the cure. This does not mean that MPD does not exist, but that its origin and development are often, if not most often, explicable without the model of separate but permeable ego-states or "alters" arising out of the ashes of a destroyed "original self." </font> </p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">A rather common view of MPD is given by philosopher Daniel Dennett. </font> </p> <blockquote> <p><font face="Arial" size="3"><b>...the evidence is now voluminous that there are not a handful or a hundred but thousands of</b> <b>cases of MPD diagnosed today, and it almost invariably owes its existence to prolonged early</b> <b>childhood abuse, usually sexual, and of sickening severity. Nicholas Humphrey and I</b> <b>investigated MPD several years ago ["Speaking for Our Selves: An Assessment of Multiple</b> <b>Personality Disorder," <i>Raritan</i>, 9, pp. 68-98] and found it to be a complex phenomenon that</b> <b>extends far beyond individual brains and the sufferers.</b> </font> </p> <p><font face="Arial" size="3"><b>These children have often been kept in such extraordinary terrifying and confusing circumstances that I am more amazed that they survive psychologically at all than I am that</b> <b>they manage to preserve themselves by a desperate redrawing of their boundaries. What they do, when confronted with overwhelming conflict and pain, is this: They "leave." They create a</b> <b>boundary so that the horror doesn't happen to them; it either happens to no one, or to some</b> <b>other self, better able to sustain its organization under such an onslaught--at least that's what</b> <b>they say they did, as best they recall.</b></font></p> </blockquote> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Dennett exhibits minimal skepticism about the truth of the MPD accounts, and focuses on how they can be explained metaphysically and biologically. For all his brilliant exploration of the concept of the self, the one perspective he doesn't seem to give much weight to is the one Spanos takes: that the self and the multiple selves of the MPD patient are social constructs, not needing a metaphysical or biological explanation so much as a social-psychological one. That is not to say that our biology is not a significant determining factor in the development of our ideas about selves, including our own self. It is to say, however, that before we go off worrying about how to metaphysically explain one or a hundred selves in one body, or one self in a hundred bodies, we might want to consider that a phenomenological analysis of behavior which takes that behavior at face value, or which attributes it to nothing but brain structure and biochemistry, may be missing the most significant element in the creation of the self: the sociocognitive context in which our ideas of self, disease, personality, memory, etc., emerge. Being a social construct does not make the self any less real, by the way. And Spanos should not be taken to deny either that the self exists or that MPD exists. </font> </p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">But if thinkers of Dennett's stature accept MPD as something which needs explaining in terms of psychological dynamics limited to the psyche of the abused rather than in terms of social constructs, the task of convincing therapists who treat MPD to accept Spanos' way of thinking is Herculean. How could it be possible that most MPD patients have been created in the therapist's laboratory, so to speak? How could it be possible that so many people, particularly female people [85% of MPD patients are female], could have so many <a href="falsememory.html">false memories</a> of childhood sexual abuse? How could so many people behave as if their bodies have been invaded by numerous entities or personalities, if they hadn't really been so invaded? How could so many people actually experience past lives under hypnosis, a standard procedure of some therapists who treat MPD? How could the defense mechanism explanation for MPD, in terms of <a href="repressedmemory.html">repression</a> of childhood sexual trauma and dissociation, not be correct? How could so many people be so wrong about so much? Spanos' answer makes it sound almost too easy for such a massive amount of <a href="selfdeception.html">self-deception</a> and delusion to develop: it's happened before and we all know about it. Remember <a HREF="exorcism.html">demonic possession</a>? </font> </p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Most educated people today do not try to explain epilepsy, brain damage, genetic disorders, neurochemical imbalances, feverish hallucinations, or troublesome behavior by appealing to the idea of demonic possession. Yet, at one time, all of Europe and America would have accepted such an explanation. Furthermore, we had our experts--the priests and theologians--to tell us how to identify the possessed and how to exorcise the demons. An elaborate theological framework bolstered this worldview, and an elaborate set of social rituals and behaviors validated it on a continuous basis. In fact, every culture, no matter how primitive and pre-scientific, had a belief in some form of demonic possession. It had its shamans and witch doctors who performed rituals to rid the possessed of their demons. In their own sociocognitive contexts, such beliefs and behaviors were seen as obviously correct, and were constantly reinforced by traditional and customary social behaviors and expectations. </font> </p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Most educated people today believe that the behaviors of <a href="witches.html">witches</a> and other possessed persons--as well as the behaviors of their tormentors, exorcists, and executioners--were enactments of social roles. With the exception of religious fundamentalists (who still live in the world of demons, witches, and supernatural magic), educated people do not believe that in those days there really were witches, or that demons really did invade bodies, or that priests really did exorcise those demons by their ritualistic magic. Yet, for those who lived in the time of witches and demons, these beings were as real as anything else they experienced. In Spanos' view, what is true of the world of demons and exorcists is true of the psychological world filled with phenomena such as repression of childhood sexual trauma and its manifestation in such disorders as MPD. </font> </p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Spanos makes a very strong case for the claim that "patients learn to construe themselves as possessing multiple selves, learn to present themselves in terms of this construal, and learn to reorganize and elaborate on their personal biography so as to make it congruent with their understanding of what it means to be a multiple." Psychotherapists, according to Spanos, "play a particularly important part in the generation and maintenance of MPD." According to Spanos, most therapists never see a single case of MPD and some therapists report seeing hundreds of cases each year. It should be distressing to those trying to defend the integrity of psychotherapy that a patient's diagnosis depends upon the preconceptions of the therapist. However, an MPD patient typically has no memory of sexual abuse upon entering therapy. Only after the therapist encourages the patient do memories of sexual abuses emerge. Furthermore, the typical MPD patient does not begin manifesting "alters" until <i>after</i> treatment begins (Piper 1998). MPD therapists counter these charges by claiming that their methods are tried and true, which they know from experience, and those therapists who never treat MPD don't know what to look for.<a href="http://www.dissociation.com/">*</a></font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Multiple selves exist, and have existed in other cultures, without being related to the notion of a mental disorder, as is the case today in North America. According to Spanos, "Multiple identities can develop in a wide variety of cultural contexts and serve numerous different social functions." Neither childhood sexual abuse nor mental disorder is a necessary condition for multiple personality to manifest itself. Multiple personalities are best understood as "rule-governed social constructions." They "are established, legitimated, maintained, and altered through social interaction." In a number of different historical and social contexts, people have learned to think of themselves as "possessing more than one identity or self, and can learn to behave as if they are first one identity and then a different identity." However, "people are unlikely to think of themselves in this way or to behave in this way unless their culture has provided models from whom the rules and characteristics of multiple identity enactments can be learned. Along with providing rules and models, the culture, through its socializing agents, must also provide legitimation for multiple self enactments." Again, Spanos is not saying that MPD does not exist, but that the standard model of (a) <i>abuse,</i> (b) <i>withdrawal of original self</i>, and then (c) <i>emergence of alters,</i> is not needed to explain MPD. Nor is the psychological baggage that goes with that model: repression, recovered memory of childhood sexual abuse, integration of alters in therapy. Nor are the standard diagnostic techniques: <a href="hypnosis.html">hypnosis</a>, including <a href="pastlife.html">past life regression</a>, and <a href="inkblot.html">Rorschach tests</a>. </font> </p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">It should be noted that books and films have had a strong influence on the belief in the nature of MPD, e.g., <i>Sybil, The Three Faces of Eve, The Five of Me, </i>or<i> The Minds of Billy Milligan. </i>These mass media presentations influence not only the general public's beliefs about MPD, but they affect MPD patients as well. For example, Flora Rheta Schreiber's <em>Sybil </em>is the story of a woman with sixteen personalities allegedly created in response to having been abused as a child. Before the publication of<em> Sybil</em> in 1973 and the 1976 television movie starring Sally Fields as Sybil, there had been only about 75 reported cases of MPD. Since <em>Sybil</em> there have some 40,000 diagnoses of MPD, mostly in North America.</font></p> <p align="left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Sybil has been identified as <a href="http://www.astraeasweb.net/plural/qsybil23.html"> Shirley Ardell Mason,</a> who died of breast cancer in 1998 at the age of 75. Her therapist has been identified as Cornelia Wilbur, who died in 1992, leaving Mason $25,000 and all future royalties from <em>Sybil</em>. Schreiber died in 1988. It is now known that <a href="http://www.astraeasweb.net/plural/sybilbogus.html">Mason had no MPD symptoms before therapy with Wilbur</a>, who used hypnosis and other suggestive techniques to tease out the so-called "personalities." <em>Newsweek</em> (January 25, 1999) reports that, according to historian Peter M. Swales (who first identified Mason as Sybil), "there is strong evidence that [the worst abuse in the book] could not have happened."</font></p> <p align="left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Dr. Herbert Spiegel, who also treated "Sybil", believes Wilbur suggested the personalities as part of her therapy and that the patient adopted them with the help of hypnosis and sodium pentothal. He describes his patient as highly hypnotizable and extremely suggestible. Mason was so helpful that she read the literature on MPD, including <em>The Three Faces of Eve</em>. The Sybil episode seems clearly to be symptomatic of an iatrogenic disorder. Yet, the Sybil case is the paradigm for the standard model of MPD. A defender of this model, Dr. Philip M. Coons, claims that "the relationship of multiple personality to child abuse was not generally recognized until the publication of Sybil."</font></p> <p align="left"><font face="Arial" size="3">The MPD community suffered another serious attack on its credibility when Dr. Bennett Braun, the founder of the International Society for the Study of Disassociation, had his license suspended over allegations he used drugs and hypnosis to convince a patient she killed scores of people in Satanic rituals. The patient claims that Braun convinced her that she had 300 personalities, among them a child molester, a high priestess of a satanic cult, and a cannibal. The patient told the Chicago Tribune: "I began to add a few things up and realized there was no way I could come from a little town in Iowa, be eating 2,000 people a year, and nobody said anything about it." The patient won $10.6 million in a lawsuit against Braun, Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Hospital, and another therapist.</font></p> <p align="center"><b><font color="#006699" face="Arial" size="3">defenders of MPD</font></b></p> <p align="left"><font face="Arial" size="3">The defenders of the MPD/DID standard model of genesis, diagnosis, and treatment argue that the disease is underdiagnosed because its complexity makes it very difficult to identify. Dr. Philip M. Coons, who is in the Department of Psychiatry at the Indiana University School of Medicine, claims that "there is a professional reluctance to diagnose multiple personality disorder." He thinks this "stems from a number of factors including the generally subtle presentation of the symptoms, the fearful reluctance of the patient to divulge important clinical information, professional ignorance concerning dissociative disorders, and the reluctance of the clinician to believe that incest actually occurs and is not the product of fantasy." Dr. Coons also claims that demonic possession was "a forerunner of multiple personality."</font></p> <p align="left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Another defender of the standard model of MPD, Dr. Ralph Allison, has <a href="http://www.dissociation.com/index/published/bianchi.txt">posted his diagnosis</a> of Kenneth Bianchi, the so-called Hillside Strangler, in which the therapist admits he has changed his mind several times. Bianchi, now a convicted serial killer serving a life sentence, was diagnosed as having MPD by defense psychiatrist <a href="http://www.clinicalsocialwork.com/egostate.html">Jack G. Watkins</a>. Dr. Watkins used hypnosis on Bianchi and "Steve" emerged to an explicit suggestion from the therapist. "Steve" was allegedly Bianchi's alter who did the murders. Prosecution psychiatrist <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20130504075314/http://www.rickross.com/reference/false_memories/fsm26.html">Martin T. Orne</a>, an expert on hypnosis, argued successfully before the court that the hypnosis and the MPD symptoms were a sham.</font></p> <p align="left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Allison claims, but offers no evidence, that the controversy over MPD is one between therapists, who defend the standard model, and teachers, who deny MPD exists.<a href="http://www.dissociation.com/index/Definition/">*</a> The battle took place in committee when preparing the DSM-IV, he claims. The teachers won and MPD was removed and DID replaced it. The DSM-IV is the current version (1994) of the American Psychiatric Association's <i><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0890420254/roberttoddcarrolA/">Diagnostic & Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders</a></i>. It lists 410 mental disorders, up from145 in DSM-II (1968). The first edition in 1952 listed 60 disorders. Some claim that this proliferation of disorders indicates an attempt of therapists to expand their market; others see the rise in disorders as evidence of better diagnostic tools. According to Allison, MPD was called "Hysterical Dissociative Disorder" in DSM-II and did not have its own code number. MPD was listed and coded in DSM-III, but removed in DSM-IV and replaced with DID.</font></p> <p align="left"><font face="Arial" size="3">It is possible, of course, that some cases of MPD emerge spontaneously without input from the MPD community, while other cases--perhaps most cases--of MPD have been created by therapists with the cooperation of their patients who have been influenced by authors and film makers. In either case, the suffering of the person with MPD is equally pitiable and deserving of our understanding, not derision.</font></p> <p align="left"><font face="Arial" size="3"> Finally, <a href="http://www.karitas.net/pavilion/">there are some MPs who do not consider their condition to be a disorder</a>, and whose main suffering comes from the thought of what others will think or do if they find out. They consider just about everything presented above from the psychiatrists, psychologists, philosophers, and other professionals to be <a href="http://www.dreamshore.net/amorpha/myths.html">myths</a>. Like the fantasizing women in Wilson and Barber's study (1983) of "<a href="fantasyprone.html">fantasy-prone persons</a>," there are many MPs who don't reveal their "secret" for fear of ridicule and ostracism. </font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><b>See also</b> <a HREF="exorcism.html">exorcism</a>, <a href="falsememory.html">false memory</a>, <a href="fantasyprone.html">fantasy-prone personality</a>, <a href="hypnosis.html">hypnosis</a>, <a href="hystero.html">hystero-epilepsy</a>, <a HREF="therapy.html">New Age psychotherapies</a>, <a HREF="repressedmemory.html">repressed memory</a>, and <a href="repress.html">repressed memory therapy</a>.</font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><b>further reading</b></font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><a href="comments/mpdcom.html"><strong>reader comments</strong></a></font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><b><font size="3">books and articles</font></b></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Coons, P.M. (1986). "Child abuse and multiple personality: review of the literature and suggestions for treatment." <i>International Journal of Child Abuse and Neglect</i>, 10, 455-462.</font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0316180661/roberttoddcarrolA/">Dennet, Daniel. <i>Consciousness Explained</i> (Little, Brown, and Co., 1991), ch. 13, "The Reality of Selves."</a></font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0345388771/roberttoddcarrolA/">Diehl, William. <i>Primal Fear</i> (Del Rey, 1996).</a> (Note: this is a novel, recommended by Grant Middleton of the band 'The Demon Haunted World'!)</font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Keenan, Matt. <a href="http://www.fmsfonline.org/braun.html">The Devil & Dr. Braun</a> (Bennett G. Braun, M.D., author of <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0880480963/roberttoddcarrolA/">The Treatment of Multiple Personality Disorder</a></em>, was the founder and former Medical Director of the Dissociative Disorders Unit [now closed] at Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center in Skokie, Illinois. He founded of the International Society for the Study of Multiple Personality Disorder, now known as The International Society for the Study of Dissociation.)</font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Lewis, Dorothy Otnow, M.D., Catherine A. Yeager, M.A., Yael Swica, B.A., Jonathan H. Pincus, M.D., and Melvin Lewis, M.B.B.S., F.R.C.Psych., D.C.H. "Objective Documentation of Child Abuse and Dissociation in 12 Murderers With Dissociative Identity Disorder," <i>THE AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY</i> Volume 154, Number 12 December 1997 by (<a href="http://ajp.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/abstract/154/12/1703">summary</a>)</font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Lilienfeld, Scott O., et al. "Dissociative Identity Disorder and the Sociocognitive Model: Recalling the Lessons of the Past," <i> Psychological Bulletin</i>, 125(5) 507-523.</font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">McHugh, Paul R., M.D. and Henry Phipps. <a href="http://www.psycom.net/mchugh.html">Multiple Personality Disorder (Dissociative Identity Disorder)</a> </font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=086377234X/roberttoddcarrolA/">Morris, Ray Aldridge. <i>Multiple Personality an Exercise in Deception </i>(Psychology Press, 1990).</a> </font> </p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Muller, Ren茅 J., Ph.D., <a href="http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/p981107.html">A Patient with Dissociative Identity Disorder 'Switches' in the Emergency Room</a> </font> <p style="text-align: left"> <font face="Arial" size="3"> <a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0942679180/roberttoddcarrolA/"> Pendergrast, Mark. <i>Victims of Memory : Sex Abuse Accusations and Shattered Lives </i>2nd ed.<i> </i>(Upper Access Book Publishers, 1996).</a></font></p> <p style="text-align: left"> <font face="Arial" size="3"> <a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=1568218540/roberttoddcarrolA/">Piper, August. <i>Hoax and Reality : The Bizarre World of Multiple Personality Disorder</i> (Jason Aronson, Inc.: 1997).</a> </font> </p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Piper, August. "Multiple Personality Disorder: Witchcraft Survives in the Twentieth Century,"<i> <a HREF="http://www.csicop.org/si/9805/witch.html">Skeptical Inquirer</a></i><a HREF="http://www.csicop.org/si/9805/witch.html">, May/June 1998</a>. </font> </p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0471132659/roberttoddcarrolA/">Ross, Colin A. <i>Dissociative Identity Disorder : Diagnosis, Clinical Features, and Treatment of Multiple Personality</i> (John Wiley & Sons, 1996).</a></font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><font COLOR="#000000"><a HREF="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=1557983402/roberttoddcarrolA/">Spanos, Nicholas P. <i>Multiple Identities and False Memories: A Sociocognitive Perspective</i></a></font> <a HREF="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=1557983402/roberttoddcarrolA/"> (Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association, 1996).</a></font><p style="text-align: left"><font size="3">Wilson, Sheryl C., and Theodore X. Barber. 1983. The fantasy-prone personality: Implications for understanding imagery, hypnosis, and parapsychological phenomena. In <i> <cite> <a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0471092258/roberttoddcarrolA/">Imagery, Current Theory, Research and Application</a></cite></i>, ed. by Anees A. Sheikh, New York: Wiley, pp. 340-390.</font><p><font size="3"><b>websites</b></font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><a href="http://www.bfms.org.uk/">The British False Memory Society</a> - see <a href="http://www.bfms.org.uk/site_pages/myths_page.htm">Twelve Myths about False Memories</a></font><p style="text-align: left"><b> <font face="Arial" size="3">MP websites that don't consider MP a disorder</font></b><p style="text-align: left"><font size="3"> <a href="http://www.karitas.net/pavilion/">Pavilion: Voices of Plurality in Action</a></font><p style="text-align: left"> <font face="Arial" size="3"> <a href="http://www.dreamshore.net/amorpha/">Collective Phenomenon</a></font><p style="text-align: left"> <font face="Arial" size="3"> <a href="http://www.exunoplures.info/">Ex Uno Plures</a></font><p style="text-align: left"><b><font face="Arial" size="3">news stories</font></b><p style="text-align: left"> <font face="Arial" size="3"> <a href="http://www.abcnews.go.com/Sports/story?id=4156516&page=1">Hershel Walker's got a<img border="0" src="graphics/hwalker.jpg" hspace="10" vspace="10" width="92" height="83"> book coming out - his publicist says he has MPD</a></font><p style="text-align: left"> <p style="text-align: left"> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><a href="http://www.fortea.us/english/psiquiatria/malpractice.htm">State of Illinois Department of Professional Regulation</a> complaint against Dr. Braun</font><p style="text-align: left"> <font color="#800000" face="Arial" size="3"><a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20130731075502/http://www.rickross.com/reference/satanism/satanism61.html"> Braun's license to practice in Illinois has been suspended</a></font><p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><a href="http://www.skipsimpson.com/psychtimes.html">Texas Jury Awards Largest Amount Ever to Patient in Recovered-Memories Case</a></font><p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"> <a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20000917084902/http:/www.chron.com/cgi-bin/auth/story.mpl/content/chronicle/metropolitan/98/09/30/memories.2-1.html">Ex-patient tells of bid to save son after cult diagnosis by therapists</a></font><p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20130731073858/http://www.rickross.com/reference/false_memories/fsm5.html">Psychologist accused of planting false abuse memories in patient </a><i>Minneapolis Star Tribune </i>by Glenn Howatt</font><p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><a href="http://www.religioustolerance.org/mpd_did.htm">MPD</a> - the religious tolerance page</font><p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><a href="http://www.illinoisfms.org/AmerLife.html">National Public Radio exposes recovered memory therapy</a></font><p style="text-align: center"><font face="Arial"> <font size="3">08/14/98, </font> <i><font size="3">AKRON BEACON JOURNAL</font></i></font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><b><font face="Arial" size="3">ILLINOIS TO DISCIPLINE PSYCHIATRIST ACCUSED OF BRAINWASHING PATIENT</font></b></p> <p><font face="Arial" size="3">Illinois has moved to discipline a prominent psychiatrist accused of convincing a patient that she was a child molester, a cannibal who ate human flesh meatloaf and the high priestess of a satanic cult.</font></p> <p><font face="Arial" size="3">Depressed after the birth of her second son, Patricia Burgus sought therapy from Dr. Bennett Braun. Burgus says the doctor, through </font><font color="#800000" face="Arial" size="3"> <a href="repress.html"> repressed-memory therapy</a></font><font face="Arial" size="3">, led her to believe among other things that she possessed 300 personalities and sexually abused her children.</font></p> </webContent>Last updated <!-- #BeginDate format:En2 -->31-Oct-2015<!-- #EndDate --> </div> </div> <div class="right"> <div class="right_it"> <div class="search"> <form method="get" action="http://www.google.com/custom" target="_top"> <input type="hidden" name="domains" value="skepdic.com" /> <input type="text" name="q" maxlength="255" value="" size="20" /> <input type="submit" name="sa" value="Search" /> <br /> <div class="search_2"> <input type="radio" name="sitesearch" value="" /> Web <input type="radio" name="sitesearch" value="skepdic.com" checked="checked" /> Skepdic.com <br /> <img src="_images/logo_google.gif" alt="Google" width="48" height="19" /> </div> <input type="hidden" name="client" value="pub-3542920166946725" /> <input type="hidden" name="forid" value="1" /> <input type="hidden" name="ie" value="ISO-8859-1" /> <input type="hidden" name="oe" value="ISO-8859-1" /> <input type="hidden" name="cof" value="GALT:#008000;GL:1;DIV:#336699;VLC:663399;AH:center;BGC:FFFFFF;LBGC:336699;ALC:0000FF;LC:0000FF;T:000000;GFNT:0000FF;GIMP:0000FF;FORID:1;" /> <input type="hidden" name="hl" value="en" /> </form> </div> <div class="center"> <p align="right"><a href="http://skepdic.com/authorpage.html"><strong>Books by R. T. Carroll </strong></a></p> <p align="right"><a href="http://skepdic.com/authorpage.html"><img src="http://skepdic.com/graphics/CTDcover140.jpg" alt="cover The Critical Thinker's Dictionary" width="140" height="212" /></a></p> <div align="right"><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0471272426/roberttoddcarrolA/"> <img src="_images/book_01.jpg" alt="The Skeptic's Dictionary" border="0" width="140" height="171" /></a> </div> </div> <h2 align="center" class="right_it">OTHER LANGUAGES</h2> <ul class="nav_4"> <li><a href="http://nederlands.skepdic.com/">Dutch</a><br /> <a href="http://sdkinderen.skepdic.com/">Dutch voor kinderen</a></li> <li><a href="http://dictionnaire.sceptiques.qc.ca/">French</a> </li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/German/morgenwelt.html">German</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.gr/">Greek</a></li> <li><a href="http://www.szabadgondolkodo.hu/szkeptikus/szotar/">Hungarian</a></li> <li><a href="http://www.vantru.is/efahyggjuordabokin/">Icelandic</a></li> <li><a href="http://italiano.skepdic.com/">Italian</a></li> <li><a href="http://www.genpaku.org/skepticj/">Japanese</a></li> <li><a href="http://www.rathinker.co.kr/skeptic/">Korean</a></li> <li><a href="http://brazil.skepdic.com/">Portuguese</a> <br /> <a href="http://skepdic.ru/">Russian</a></li> <li><a href="http://slovnik.skepdic.com/">Slovak</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepticus.org/dicc/">Spanish</a><br /> <a href="http://www.vof.se/skepdic/"> Swedish</a><br /> <a href="http://turkish.skepdic.com/">Turkish</a></li> </ul> <p>Print versions available in <a href="http://www.lannoo.be/content/lannoo/wbnl/listview/1/index.jsp?titelcode=24816&fondsid=8" >Dutch</a>, <a href="http://skepdic.com/russian.html" >Russian</a>, <a href="http://www.rakkousha.co.jp/info/index.html#2" > Japanese</a>, and <a href="http://www.aladdin.co.kr/shop/wproduct.aspx?isbn=8995876441" >Korean</a>.</p> </div> </div> </div> <div class="footer"> <a href="mcs.html"> <img src="graphics/larrow.gif" alt="larrow.gif (1051 bytes)" border="0" align="bottom" width="14" height="26"> multiple chemical sensitivity</a> | <a href="myersb.html">Myers-Briggs Type Indicator <img src="graphics/rarrow.gif" alt="rarrow.gif (1048 bytes)" border="0" align="bottom" width="13" height="26"></a> </div> </div> <div class="bottom">漏 Copyright 1994-2016 Robert T. Carroll * This page was designed by <a href="http://www.cristianpopa.com/portfolio-2/">Cristian Popa</a>.</div> </body> </html>