TWO MAIN APPROACHES OF INTERPRETING PSYCHIATRIC CONCEPTS IN THE PHILOSOPHY OF PSYCHIATRY
- Authors: Bardina S.M1
-
Affiliations:
- The Moscow School of Social and Economic Sciences
- Issue: Vol XLVIII, No 4 (2016)
- Pages: 92-94
- Section: Articles
- URL: https://journals.rcsi.science/1027-4898/article/view/14081
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.17816/nb14081
- ID: 14081
Cite item
Abstract
The article examines ways of interpreting psychiatric concepts in the philosophy of psychiatry. Two main approaches - a conceptual analysis and an interpretative model - are distinguished. The author compares these strategies and examines different ways of philosophical reflection on a psychiatric practice. Furthermore, the author highlights problematic aspects of both approaches. While a conceptual analysis deals rather with use of concepts, than with concepts themselves, an interpretative model could not provide a means of applying research findings.
Full Text
##article.viewOnOriginalSite##About the authors
Svetlana M Bardina
The Moscow School of Social and Economic Sciences
Email: neology@bk.ru
119571, Moscow, prospect Vernadskogo, 82, building 2
References
- Bowden H. A Phenomenological Study of Anorexia Nervosa // Philosophy, Psychiatry & Psychology. Vol. 19. № 3. P. 227-241.
- Brogna P., Caroppo E. The body as a simulacrum of identity: the subjective experience in the eating disorders // Annali dell’Istituto Superiore di Sanità. 2010. № 4. P. 427-435.
- Fuchs T. Implicit and Explicit Temporality // Philosophy, Psychiatry & Psychology. 2005. Vol. 12. № 3. P. 195-198.
- Fulford K.W.M., Morris K.J., Sadler J.Z. et al. Past improbable, future possible: the renaissance in philosophy and psychiatry / Nature and narrative. An introduction to the new philosophy of psychiatry. New York: Oxford University Press, 2003. P. 1-41.
- Fulford B., Thornton T., Graham G. Oxford Textbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry. Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press, 2006.
- Heinemaa M.L.A. On the grammar of ‘psychosis’ // Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy. 2000. Vol. 3. № 1. P. 39-46.
- Hofmann B. The concept of disease-vague, complex, or just indefinable? // Medical Health Care and Philosophy. 2010. № 13. P. 3-10.
- Kendell R. The concept of disease and its implications for psychiatry // British Journal of Psychiatry. 1975. № 127. P. 305-315.
- Sass A., Pienkos E., Nelson B., Medford N. Anomalous self-experience in depersonalization and schizophrenia: A comparative investigation // Consciousness and Cognition. 2013. № 22. P. 430-441.
- Stanghellini G., Ballerini M. Dis-sociality: the phenomenological approach to social dysfunction in schizophrenia // World Psychiatry. 2002. Vol. 1. № 2. P. 102-106.
- Stanghellini G., Castellini G., Brogna P., Ricca V. Identity and Eating Disorders (IDEA): A Questionnaire Evaluating Identity and Embodiment in Eating Disorder Patients // Psychopathology. 2012. № 45 (3). P. 147-158.
- Wilkinson S. Is `Normal Grief’ a Mental Disorder? // Philosophical Quarterly. 2000. Vol. 50, Issue 202. P. 289-304.