Full text of this book chapter is not available in the UHRAMany psychopathological disorders – clinical depression, borderline personality disorder, schizophrenia and autistic spectrum disorder (ASD) – are commonly classified as disorders of the self. In an intuitive sense this sort of classification is unproblematic. There can be no doubt that such disorders make a difference to one’s ability to form and maintain a coherent sense of oneself in various ways. However, any theoretically rigourous attempt to show that they relate to underlying problems with say, such things as minimal selves or, even, so-called narrative selves – where these latter constructs are invoked to do genuine explanatory work – would require, inter alia, philosophical...
Detachment from external reality, distancing from others, closure into a sort of virtual hermitage, ...
Objective: The aim of this paper is to provide arguments for a phenomenologically informed clinical ...
Realists about mental disorder have been hasty about dismissing social explanations of how mental di...
What we take mental disorder to be has implications for how researchers classify, explain, and treat...
Any effort to discuss or study psychopathology (by any name) must decide how to distinguish between ...
The concept of the self has recently gained increasing attention in psychopathology for mainly two r...
The study of the psychopathological aspects of human nature has contributed a vast mass of observati...
The contemporary approach to detecting and studying schizophrenia, known as operational psychiatry, ...
Various traditions in mental health care, such as phenomenological, and existential and cognitive-be...
This paper explores how the diagnosis of mental disorder may affect the diagnosed subject’s self-con...
Aim: Although the different approaches to psychosis research have made significant advances in their...
In this paper I discuss John Searle’s selective view of intentionality of mental states, and place i...
In this paper I discuss John Searle’s selective view of intentionality of mental states, and plac...
The analysis of mental disorders necessarily requires careful and multilayered reflection. Psychiatr...
The no-self thesis is said to originate in David Hume’s (1739) “bundle theory of self,” questioning ...
Detachment from external reality, distancing from others, closure into a sort of virtual hermitage, ...
Objective: The aim of this paper is to provide arguments for a phenomenologically informed clinical ...
Realists about mental disorder have been hasty about dismissing social explanations of how mental di...
What we take mental disorder to be has implications for how researchers classify, explain, and treat...
Any effort to discuss or study psychopathology (by any name) must decide how to distinguish between ...
The concept of the self has recently gained increasing attention in psychopathology for mainly two r...
The study of the psychopathological aspects of human nature has contributed a vast mass of observati...
The contemporary approach to detecting and studying schizophrenia, known as operational psychiatry, ...
Various traditions in mental health care, such as phenomenological, and existential and cognitive-be...
This paper explores how the diagnosis of mental disorder may affect the diagnosed subject’s self-con...
Aim: Although the different approaches to psychosis research have made significant advances in their...
In this paper I discuss John Searle’s selective view of intentionality of mental states, and place i...
In this paper I discuss John Searle’s selective view of intentionality of mental states, and plac...
The analysis of mental disorders necessarily requires careful and multilayered reflection. Psychiatr...
The no-self thesis is said to originate in David Hume’s (1739) “bundle theory of self,” questioning ...
Detachment from external reality, distancing from others, closure into a sort of virtual hermitage, ...
Objective: The aim of this paper is to provide arguments for a phenomenologically informed clinical ...
Realists about mental disorder have been hasty about dismissing social explanations of how mental di...