In an era marked by rapid societal shifts and an escalating sense of individual isolation, a systemic psychotherapist's perspective highlights the critical need to contextualize human suffering within relational and societal frameworks. This viewpoint stands in stark contrast to the prevailing psychiatric model, which, as articulated by the Marxist cultural critic Mark Fisher, frequently pathologizes rational human responses to challenging environments, attributing them to individual brain chemistry and thereby reinforcing an atomized understanding of human experience.
The Proliferation of Neuro-Identitarianism: A Deeper Look into Societal Alienation
The past few years have witnessed an unprecedented surge in psychiatric diagnoses, particularly under the broad umbrella of neurodiversity, transforming the interpretation of not just distress but a vast array of human experiences. For instance, between 2019 and 2024, England saw a fivefold increase in autism assessment referrals, accompanied by a 51% rise in ADHD medication prescriptions. This trend is amplified by public figures sharing their diagnoses and social media platforms awash with content reinterpreting everyday struggles through a 'neuro' lens, where social anxieties become 'rejection sensitivity dysphoria' and mid-life introspection is re-framed as 'autistic burnout'.
Professor Uta Frith, a leading autism researcher, has voiced concerns that the concept of autism has expanded so significantly that it has lost its original clinical meaning. Her critique centers on the absence of objective biomarkers, leading to diagnostic processes heavily reliant on subjective accounts and often overlooking contraindications such as reciprocal communication skills. This results in individuals being diagnosed who may experience social discomfort but lack the profound social-communication difficulties historically associated with neurodevelopmental conditions.
Similarly, Dr. Sami Timimi, a critical psychiatrist, in his work 'Searching for Normal,' chronicles the astonishing growth of ADHD diagnoses. What was once a rare condition predominantly affecting adolescent boys has now become commonplace, with prevalence rates reaching 5% in UK children and 10% in the US. Despite extensive genetic, neurochemical, and brain imaging research, no definitive biomarker for ADHD has been identified. Diagnosis largely depends on subjective questionnaires, raising questions about what constitutes 'normal' developmental behavior as the diagnostic criteria continue to broaden.
Beyond the concerns of overdiagnosis, a more compelling question arises: why do so many individuals increasingly identify as neurodivergent and seek such recognition? The answer, it appears, extends beyond the direct influence of psychiatric discourse, pointing to a deeper yearning for identity within contemporary life. As Timimi suggests, by shedding the contested 'neuro' prefix, the demand for diagnosis essentially becomes a claim to difference—an assertion that one's experiences and needs deviate from the 'neurotypical' norm.
An observable pattern, dubbed 'neuro-actualization,' permeates neurodiversity blogs and social media. This narrative often commences with a portrayal of pre-diagnosis self-ignorance, characterized by a lack of understanding of one's own needs and capabilities, leading to persistent feelings of inadequacy, overwhelm, loneliness, and misunderstanding. In this context, diagnosis transcends a mere medical event, becoming an ontological transformation that re-shapes a fragmented past into a coherent identity. This newly found identity then positions the individual as unique within a world perceived as unaccommodating, offering a pathway to resistance and a rights-based framework for asserting individual needs.
Remarkably, the descriptions of the pre-diagnosed self—marked by profound unknowing—bear a striking resemblance to Marx's concept of alienation, particularly 'alienation from species-being' or Gattungswesen. Marx posited that humans, inherently social beings, understand themselves through collective life. Alienation occurs when individuals are reduced to mere cogs in systems that serve purposes other than their own inherent human flourishing. In our current era of late capitalism, these processes of alienation have intensified to dystopian levels. Sociologist Zygmunt Bauman's concept of 'liquid modernity' describes a state characterized by social fragmentation and enforced individualization, where people increasingly perceive others as external and judgmental. Community ties have weakened, civic engagement has dwindled, and a tech-driven, contactless existence has largely supplanted embodied social interaction. Even consciousness itself has become a commodity, with the attention economy thriving on distraction and fragmentation, drawing us away from genuine human connection and our inner selves. This environment, therefore, naturally fosters feelings of inadequacy, overwhelm, loneliness, and misunderstanding.
The diagnostic 'solution' simultaneously articulates and solidifies this experience of alienation. It frames what might be collective human experiences as solely individual brain-wiring issues, diverting attention from the need for broader societal change. Any suggestion that these 'neurodiverse' experiences might reflect more universal human struggles is often met with anger and accusations of invalidation. This leads to a paradoxical outcome: attempts to address the malaise of an individualistic, alienated existence merely reinforce individualism and estrangement, leaving the root causes of suffering unaddressed. This inherent contradiction is a defining characteristic of liquid modernity, where distress is individualized, the self becomes the primary explanatory framework, and identity evolves into a competitive endeavor. As Ulrich Beck notes, 'how one lives becomes a biographical solution to systemic contradictions.'
Diagnosis offers a promise of validating individual experiences and needs within a competitive identity marketplace, leveraging the language of disability and civil rights to assert those needs. This 'neuro-identitarianism' aligns with a broader 'hyper-liberal' cultural shift, where, as philosopher John Gray observes, self-defined identity has become paramount, reducing politics to mere self-affirmation. This phenomenon, whether manifesting as nativist ethnic nationalism or symbolic identity politics, ultimately fragments public life into moralized contests between competing subjectivities, undermining the pursuit of structural change and the common good.
This fragmentation carries tangible consequences. In the UK, the costs of special educational needs provisions are escalating to unsustainable levels, as parents are compelled into adversarial battles with local authorities to secure support for their children. Concurrently, schools are struggling with overcrowded classrooms, exhausted teachers, and diminished universal provisions due to years of austerity. Since 2012, the number of 16- to 24-year-olds claiming disability benefits has doubled to 400,000, with nearly half attributed to autism or ADHD diagnoses. Diagnosis has become a superficial remedy, a pathway to state benefits that fails to address a dysfunctional labor market marked by precarious, low-wage jobs that often fall short of covering basic living costs.
Neuro-identitarianism thus exemplifies a larger societal pattern: as fundamental provisions like housing, healthcare, education, and employment deteriorate, resistance increasingly adopts an individualized and short-sighted form, diluting collective pressure for systemic reform. Tragically, those with the most severe functional impairments, often lacking the means to advocate for themselves, are further marginalized amidst the clamor of neuro-influencers. While neuro-identitarianism is an understandable response to the alienation inherent in late capitalism—reflecting a profound human need for recognition in societies where organic opportunities for connection are eroding—its tragic flaw lies in fostering special interest groups defined by difference. By denying a shared human experience of an often inhospitable world, it inadvertently alienates individuals from their common humanity, perpetuating the very sense of estrangement it purports to resolve.
The expansion of neuro-identitarianism, while seemingly empowering individuals through diagnostic labels, inadvertently diverts attention from the deeper, systemic issues that contribute to widespread distress and alienation in modern society. Instead of focusing solely on individual brain chemistry, there's a compelling argument to be made for re-evaluating our collective societal structures and fostering environments that prioritize genuine human connection, community, and support. Only by addressing these foundational problems can we move beyond fragmented identities and work towards a more inclusive and supportive world for everyone, particularly those who are most vulnerable.