It is the main argument of this book that emotional and psychological
distress is often brought about through the operation of
social-environmental powers which have their origin at a considerable
distance from those ultimately subjected to them. On the whole,
psychology has concerned itself very little with the field of power
which stretches beyond our immediate relations with each other, and this
has led to serious limitations on the explanatory power of the theories
it has produced. To illustrate this, typical cases of patient distress
in the 1980s are examined. The decade when the right-wing of politics
proclaimed there was no such thing as society gave rise to psychological
distress across social classes, as long-standing societal institutions
were dismantled. This is as much a work of sociology, politics, and
philosophy, as it is of psychology. Fundamentals of an environmental
understanding of distress are outlined. A person is the interaction of a
body with the environment.