Both proponents and opponents of the claim that mental disorders are natural kinds compare mental disorders to paradigmatic examples of natural kinds, to inquire into a set of properties that achieve three scientific tasks: explanation, prediction, and intervention. I argue that the comparative strategy fails to take us to any intervention-related properties of mental disorders. I replace it with what I call a trilateral strategy—a strategy guided by first-person accounts of individuals with mental disorders, and the relevant clinical and scientific work on psychopathology. I illustrate how the trilateral strategy works with a focus on schizophrenia—an example used by both sides of the debate
Essentialism is one of the most pervasive problems in mental health research. Many psychiatrists sti...
The paper deals with two central issues in the philosophy of neuroscience and psychiatry, namely tho...
In psychiatry there is a traditional categorical conception stating that several disorders like schi...
In this volume, leading philosophers of psychiatry examine psychiatric classification systems, inclu...
This paper proposes that mental disorders are best conceived as practical psychiatric kinds. This me...
In recent years both philosophers and scientists have asked whether or not our current kinds of ment...
A primary focus of the debates in philosophy of psychiatry addressed in each of the chapters in this...
This paper addresses philosophical issues concerning whether mental disorders are natural kinds and ...
Medicalization of human behavioral diversity is a recurrent theme in the history of psychiatry, and ...
A prevalent feature of philosophical and psychiatric theories which seek to clarify concepts of ment...
AbstractTheories of mental disorders remain scientific in spite of both the absence of reductive exp...
The paper considers whether psychiatric kinds can be natural kinds and concludes that they can. This...
There is debate over what the proper scope of psychiatry is and what the nature of the conditions it...
Much research in the philosophy of psychiatry has been devoted to the characterization of the normal...
The onset and development of mental diseases are currently held to result from a combination of vari...
Essentialism is one of the most pervasive problems in mental health research. Many psychiatrists sti...
The paper deals with two central issues in the philosophy of neuroscience and psychiatry, namely tho...
In psychiatry there is a traditional categorical conception stating that several disorders like schi...
In this volume, leading philosophers of psychiatry examine psychiatric classification systems, inclu...
This paper proposes that mental disorders are best conceived as practical psychiatric kinds. This me...
In recent years both philosophers and scientists have asked whether or not our current kinds of ment...
A primary focus of the debates in philosophy of psychiatry addressed in each of the chapters in this...
This paper addresses philosophical issues concerning whether mental disorders are natural kinds and ...
Medicalization of human behavioral diversity is a recurrent theme in the history of psychiatry, and ...
A prevalent feature of philosophical and psychiatric theories which seek to clarify concepts of ment...
AbstractTheories of mental disorders remain scientific in spite of both the absence of reductive exp...
The paper considers whether psychiatric kinds can be natural kinds and concludes that they can. This...
There is debate over what the proper scope of psychiatry is and what the nature of the conditions it...
Much research in the philosophy of psychiatry has been devoted to the characterization of the normal...
The onset and development of mental diseases are currently held to result from a combination of vari...
Essentialism is one of the most pervasive problems in mental health research. Many psychiatrists sti...
The paper deals with two central issues in the philosophy of neuroscience and psychiatry, namely tho...
In psychiatry there is a traditional categorical conception stating that several disorders like schi...