What produces mental illness: genes, environment, both, neither? The
answer can be found in memes--replicable units of information linking
genes and environment in the memory and in culture--whose effects on
individual brain development can be benign or toxic. This book
reconceptualizes mental disorders as products of stressful gene-meme
interactions and introduces a biopsychosocial template for meme-based
diagnosis and treatment. A range of therapeutic modalities, both
broad-spectrum (meditation) and specific(cognitive-behavioral), for
countering negative memes and their replication are considered, as are
possibilities for memetic prevention strategies. In this book, the
author outlines the roles of genes and memes in the evolution of the
human brain; elucidates the creation, storage, and evolution of memes
within individual brains; examines culture as a carrier and supplier of
memes to the individual; provides examples of gene-meme interactions
that can result in anxiety, depression, and other disorders; proposes a
multiaxial gene-meme model for diagnosing mental illness; identifies
areas of meme-based prevention for at-risk children; and defines
specific syndromes in terms of memetic symptoms, genetic/ memetic
development, and meme-based treatment.