In recent years, jurisdictions such as New York City have expanded policies permitting the involuntary psychiatric evaluation—and in some cases detention—of individuals deemed to pose a potential risk to themselves or others, even in the absence of any criminal act. These policies are often defended as pragmatic responses to public safety concerns, homelessness, and untreated mental illness. Critics typically object on utilitarian grounds (questioning effectiveness or unintended harms) or deontological grounds (invoking individual rights and bodily autonomy).
By Sam Ben-Meir – April 24, 2024
While these objections are important, they do not reach the deepest ethical problem with preventive detention. What is at stake is not merely the balance of harms and benefits, nor the violation of abstract rights, but the very conception of the person presupposed by such policies. From a Fichtean standpoint—one grounded in mutual recognition as the condition of freedom—preventive psychiatric detention represents a profound ethical failure. It is not simply misguided policy; it is a structural denial of recognition that undermines the intelligibility of freedom, responsibility, and the state itself.
Utilitarian critiques of preventive detention emphasize its dubious empirical foundations: predictive assessments of dangerousness are notoriously unreliable, disproportionately target marginalized populations, and often exacerbate the very harms they purport to prevent. Deontological critiques, by contrast, stress that involuntary detention without wrongdoing violates fundamental rights to liberty, due process, and bodily integrity.
Fichte’s philosophy does not reject these concerns, but it reorders them. For Fichte, ethics does not begin with outcomes or rules; it begins with the social conditions under which a person can appear as a free being at all. The central question is not whether preventive detention maximizes welfare or violates a right, but whether it preserves or destroys the relation of recognition through which freedom becomes possible.
At the core of Johann Gottlieb Fichte’s moral and political philosophy lies a radical thesis: freedom is not a private inner possession, nor a metaphysical given. It is a practical achievement constituted through relations of mutual recognition. In the Foundations of Natural Right, Fichte argues that a rational being becomes conscious of itself as free only when it is recognized as such by another rational being. The self does not precede social relation; it emerges through it.
Recognition, for Fichte, is not merely a moral attitude or psychological acknowledgment. It is an embodied, institutional, and reciprocal relation enacted through law, social practices, and material conditions. To recognize another as free is to relate to them as a potential author of their actions—even when their capacities are impaired, fragile, or undeveloped.
This has decisive implications for how we understand mental illness. If freedom is constituted through recognition, then policies that suspend recognition in advance—on the basis of predicted incapacity or risk—do not protect freedom; they dissolve its very conditions.
Preventive psychiatric detention operates on a logic of preemption. Individuals are detained not for what they have done, but for what they might do. This shift is ethically catastrophic from a Fichtean perspective. It replaces recognition with suspicion, reciprocity with unilateral assessment, and responsibility with administrative control.
To detain someone preventively on the basis of mental illness is to declare, in advance, that they cannot be recognized as a responsible agent within the shared social world. The person is no longer addressed as a participant in the normative order, but as a site of risk to be managed. This is not a temporary limitation of freedom in response to wrongdoing; it is the suspension of freedom as such.
Fichte insists that coercion can be justified only as a response to an actual violation of right—an act that disrupts the conditions of reciprocal freedom. Preventive detention, by contrast, treats freedom itself as a liability. It transforms the possibility of agency into grounds for confinement. In doing so, it reverses the ethical order: instead of securing the conditions of freedom, the state preemptively nullifies them.
A common defense of preventive detention is that severe mental illness compromises agency to such an extent that recognition is no longer appropriate. From a Fichtean standpoint, this argument rests on a fatal confusion between empirical impairment and normative status.
Fichte grounds recognition not in actual capacities—such as rational deliberation, self-control, or coherence—but in the idea of the person as a bearer of freedom in principle. Recognition is owed not because someone currently exercises freedom well, but because freedom remains the horizon of their existence. To withdraw recognition on the basis of impairment is to make dignity conditional on performance.
Indeed, Fichte is clear that the demand for recognition becomes more acute precisely where freedom is threatened or fragile. To encounter vulnerability with derecognition is not realism; it is ethical abdication. Preventive detention communicates a devastating social message: that those who struggle with mental illness are not fellow participants in freedom, but latent dangers whose presence must be neutralized.
For Fichte, the state exists to secure the external conditions under which reciprocal freedom can flourish. This includes material support, legal protection, and institutional recognition. The state does not exist to optimize safety at all costs, nor to eliminate risk from social life. A world without risk is a world without freedom.
Preventive psychiatric detention represents a transformation of the state from guarantor of recognition into manager of danger. It substitutes administrative judgment for legal accountability and replaces the language of right with the language of risk. In doing so, it undermines its own legitimacy. A state that detains without offense ceases to relate to its citizens as co-legislators of freedom and instead treats them as objects of governance.
This is especially troubling when such policies are disproportionately applied to unhoused individuals, people of color, and those lacking access to voluntary mental healthcare. What appears as neutral concern for safety becomes, in practice, a mechanism for managing social disorder through coerced invisibility.
The strongest objection to a Fichtean critique of preventive detention appeals to public safety. Surely, it is argued, the state has an obligation to intervene when credible threats exist, even before harm occurs. A Fichtean response does not deny this obligation—but it sharply limits its scope. Intervention may be justified when there is an imminent and specific threat that cannot be addressed through recognition-preserving means. But such intervention must be narrowly tailored, temporally limited, and oriented toward restoring recognition, not suspending it indefinitely.
Preventive detention policies fail this test. They rely on vague criteria (“appears mentally ill,” “may pose a risk”), grant wide discretion to authorities, and often lack robust procedural safeguards. More importantly, they treat mental illness itself as a proxy for dangerousness, thereby collapsing vulnerability into threat.
From a Fichtean standpoint, the state may act to prevent harm only insofar as it continues to address the individual as a participant in the normative order—capable of response, entitled to justification, and oriented toward re-entry into reciprocal recognition. Policies that bypass this relation in the name of safety ultimately erode the very social trust they claim to protect.
Another common defense is that forced psychiatric evaluation is an act of care—an intervention on behalf of those who cannot recognize their own needs. Fichte’s philosophy allows for forms of assistance, but it draws a sharp distinction between aid that sustains recognition and coercion that replaces it. Care that treats the other as a passive object—even benevolently—undermines the conditions of freedom. Genuine care must be structured so that recognition is preserved, agency is addressed, and participation remains possible.
In practice, forced evaluation often functions less as care than as containment. It substitutes clinical authority for dialogical engagement and replaces trust with surveillance. Even when motivated by concern, such interventions risk entrenching the very alienation and mistrust that exacerbate mental distress.
The deepest problem with preventive psychiatric detention is not that it sometimes gets things wrong, but that it institutionalizes a logic in which recognition is conditional, revocable, and subordinated to risk management. This logic corrodes the ethical foundations of social life. A Fichtean ethics insists on a different threshold: recognition must come before risk assessment, not after. One must first encounter the other as a bearer of freedom—even fragile, compromised, or suffering—before any intervention can be justified. Where recognition is suspended, freedom cannot be restored; it can only be replaced by control.
Consider a middle-aged man encountered by outreach workers on a Manhattan subway platform late at night. He is disheveled, speaking to himself, and pacing erratically. He has committed no crime, threatened no one, and refuses assistance when approached. A passerby reports him as “disturbing.” Under current policy, this constellation of behaviors may be sufficient to justify involuntary psychiatric evaluation on the grounds of potential risk.
From a Fichtean standpoint, the ethical question is not whether the man might one day harm himself or others, but how the state first encounters him: as a bearer of freedom whose agency is fragile yet still addressable, or as a latent danger to be neutralized. Preventive detention resolves this ambiguity in advance by suspending recognition itself—transforming uncertainty into justification for coercion. What is lost in this transition is not merely liberty, but the very relation through which responsibility, care, and ethical response could meaningfully arise.
Preventive detention of individuals with mental illness, especially in the absence of any criminal act, cannot be justified on Fichtean grounds. It represents a preemptive withdrawal of recognition that undermines freedom at its root. Unlike utilitarian critiques, which focus on outcomes, or deontological critiques, which appeal to rights, a Fichtean critique reveals something more fundamental: such policies distort the very meaning of ethical and political responsibility.
A society committed to freedom must resist the temptation to govern through fear, prediction, and preemption. It must instead invest in the difficult work of recognition—creating institutions that support agency, address vulnerability without erasing personhood, and preserve the fragile social conditions under which freedom remains possible.
Recognition before risk is not a moral preference. It is the condition under which freedom can appear at all. Where recognition is withdrawn in advance—on the basis of prediction, impairment, or fear—freedom is not protected but displaced by administration. A society that authorizes such practices does not merely misjudge particular cases; it reorganizes its relation to persons at the level of principle. What presents itself as prudence becomes a form of derecognition, and what is lost is not only liberty, but the very framework within which liberty could be meaningfully claimed.
Sam Ben-Meir is an assistant adjunct professor of philosophy at City University of New York, College of Technology.