Despite the helpful treatments recommended and the relevant questions underscored by Bentall's text, we would be reluctant to recommend it to anyone because we found the book to be incendiary and divisive. One central premise seems to be that there is a long-standing battle for supremacy going on between psychology and psychiatry. The text suggests that those in the former profession are educated and trained to understand people and the human experience and to provide healing therapy, whereas those in the latter are indoctrinated with the medical model, have unwittingly carried Nazi-era notions of the genetic origins of psychosis into the present, and are intent on pumping people full of as much useless, dangerous medicine as possible while simultaneously avoiding any conversation. Furthering his argument that psychiatrists improperly medicate patients, Bentall claims that “It is difficult to know how many psychotic patients would be better off without taking drugs, but my guess is that the number might be as high as 50 per cent.”