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“Education does not only mean learning, reading, writing, and arithmetic,

it should provide a comprehensive knowledge”

-Ishwarchandra Vidyasagar


The Oxford handbook of philosophy and psychiatry / [electronic resource] edited by K.W.M. Fulford, Martin Davies, Richard G.T. Gipps, George Graham, John Z. Sadler, Giovanni Stanghellini and Tim Thornton. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2013. - e-book contains 1322 pages - International perspectives in philosophy and psychiatry .

Includes bibliographical references and indexes.

Contents
Front Matter
Copyright Page
Preface
The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry
Contributors
Expand1 The Next Hundred Years: Watching our Ps and Q
K. W. M. Fulford and others
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Section I History
2 Introduction: History
K. W. M. Fulford and others
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3 The Insanity Defense as a History of Mental Disorder
Daniel N. Robinson
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Expand4 Mental Health as Moral Virtue: Some Ancient Arguments
T. H. Irwin
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5 Aristotle, Plato, and the Anti-Psychiatrists: Comment on Irwin
Edward Harcourt
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Expand6 Wilhelm Griesinger: Philosophy as the Origin of a New Psychiatry
Katherine Arens
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Expand7 The Philosophical Roots of Karl Jaspers’ General Psychopathology
Christoph Mundt
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Expand8 From Madness to Mental Illness: Psychiatry and Biopolitics in Michel Foucault
Federico Leoni
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Expand9 The Epistemological Value of Depression Memoirs: A Meta-Analysis
Jennifer Radden and Somogy Varga
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Section II Contexts of Care
10 Introduction: Contexts of Care
K. W. M. Fulford and others
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Expand11 Challenges to the Modernist Identity of Psychiatry: User Empowerment and Recovery
Pat Bracken and Philip Thomas
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Expand12 Race and Gender in Philosophy of Psychiatry: Science, Relativism, and Phenomenology
Marilyn Nissim-Sabat
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Expand13 Why Psychiatry Should Fear Medicalization
Louis C. Charland
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Expand14 Technology and Psychiatry
James Phillips
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Expand15 Cure and Recovery
Larry Davidson
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Section III Establishing Relationships
16 Introduction: Establishing Relationships
K. W. M. Fulford and others
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Expand17 Varieties of Self-Awareness
Thor Grünbaum and Dan Zahavi
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Expand18 Interpersonal Relating
Daniel D. Hutto
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Expand19 Intersubjectivity and Psychopathology
Shaun Gallagher
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Expand20 Other Minds, Autism, and Depth in Human Interaction
Anita Avramides
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Expand21 Empathic Foundations of Clinical Knowledge
Nancy Nyquist Potter
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Expand22 Discourse and Diseases of the Psyche
Grant Gillett and Rom Harré
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Expand23 Philosophical Resources for the Psychiatric Interview
Giovanni Stanghellini
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Section IV Summoning Concepts
24 Introduction: Summoning Concepts
K. W. M. Fulford and others
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Expand25 Naturalist Accounts of Mental Disorder
Elselijn Kingma
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Expand26 Values-Based Practice: Topsy-Turvy Take-Home Messages from Ordinary Language Philosophy (and a Few Next Steps)
K. W. M. Fulford and others
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Expand27 Cognitive Science and Explanations of Psychopathology
Kelso Cratsley and Richard Samuels
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Expand28 What is Mental Illness?
Derek Bolton
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Expand29 Vice and Mental Disorders
John Z. Sadler
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Expand30 Rationality and Sanity: The Role of Rationality Judgments in Understanding Psychiatric Disorders
Lisa Bortolotti
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Expand31 Boundary Problems: Negotiating the Challenges of Responsibility and Loss
Jennifer Church
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Expand32 Ordering Disorder: Mental Disorder, Brain Disorder, and Therapeutic Intervention
George Graham
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Expand33 Mental Disorder: Can Merleau-Ponty Take Us Beyond the “Mind–Brain” Problem?
Eric Matthews
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Section V Descriptive Psychopathology
34 Introduction: Descriptive Psychopathology
K. W. M. Fulford and others
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Expand35 Anxiety and Phobias: Phenomenologies, Concepts, Explanations
Gerrit Glas
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Expand36 Depression and the Phenomenology of Free Will
Matthew Ratcliffe
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Expand37 Body Image Disorders
Katherine J. Morris
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Expand38 The Phenomenology of Affectivity
Thomas Fuchs
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Expand39 Delusion: The Phenomenological Approach
Louis A. Sass and Elizabeth Pienkos
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Expand40 Thought Insertion, Self-Awareness, and Rationality
Johannes Roessler
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Expand41 The Disunity of Consciousness in Psychiatric Disorders
Tim Bayne
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Expand42 Delusion: Cognitive Approaches—Bayesian Inference and Compartmentalization
Martin Davies and Andy Egan
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Section VI Assessment and Diagnostic Categories
43 Introduction: Assessment and Diagnostic Categories
K. W. M. Fulford and others
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Expand44 Mapping the Domain of Mental Illness
Jeffrey Poland and Barbara Von Eckardt
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Expand45 Values in Psychiatric Diagnosis and Classification
John Z. Sadler
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Expand46 Conceptual and Ethical Issues in the Prodromal Phase of Psychosis
Matthew Broome and others
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Expand47 Understanding Mania and Depression
S. Nassir Ghaemi
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Expand48 Autism and the Philosophy of Mind
R. Peter Hobson
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Expand49 Dementia is Dead, Long Live Ageing: Philosophy and Practice in Connection with “Dementia”
Julian C. Hughes
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Expand50 What is Addiction?
Walter Sinnott-Armstrong and Hanna Pickard
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Expand51 Identity and Addiction: What Alcoholic Memoirs Teach
Owen Flanagan
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Expand52 Personality Disorder and Validity: A History of Controversy
Peter Zachar and Robert F. Krueger
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Expand53 Personal Identity and Identity Disorders
Stephen R. L. Clark
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Section VII Explanation and Understanding
54 Introduction: Explanation and Understanding
K. W. M. Fulford and others
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Expand55 Causation and Mechanisms in Psychiatry
John Campbell
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Expand56 Natural Kinds
Rachel Cooper
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Expand57 The Medical Model and the Philosophy of Science
Dominic Murphy
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Expand58 Reliability, Validity, and the Mixed Blessings of Operationalism
Nick Haslam
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Expand59 Reduction and Reductionism in Psychiatry
Kenneth F. Schaffner
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Expand60 Diagnostic Prediction and Prognosis: Getting from Symptom to Treatment
Michael A. Bishop and J. D. Trout
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Expand61 Clinical Judgment, Tacit Knowledge, and Recognition in Psychiatric Diagnosis
Tim Thornton
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Expand62 Neural Mechanisms of Decision-Making and the Personal Level
Nicholas Shea
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Expand63 Psychopathology and the Enactive Mind
Giovanna Colombetti
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Expand64 Could Psychoanalysis be a Science?
Michael Lacewing
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Section VIII Cure and Care
65 Introduction: Cure and Care
K. W. M. Fulford and others
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Expand66 Responsibility without Blame: Philosophical Reflections on Clinical Practice
Hanna Pickard and Lisa Ward
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Expand67 Depression, Decisional Capacity, and Personal Autonomy
Lubomira Radoilska
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Expand68 Psychopharmacology and the Self
Fredrik Svenaeus
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Expand69 Practical Neuropsychiatric Ethics
Bennett Foddy and others
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Expand70 Placebo Effects in Psychiatry and Psychotherapy
David A. Jopling
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Expand71 Being Unconscious: Heidegger and Freud
Richard Askay and Jensen Farquhar
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Expand72 Cognitive Behavior Therapy: A Philosophical Appraisal
Richard Gipps
View chapter
Expand73 Understanding and Healing: Psychiatry and Psychoanalysis in the Era of Neuroscience
Jim Hopkins
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End Matter
Index

Abstract
This book presents a lively cross section of recent cross-disciplinary research in the rapidly expanding field of philosophy and psychiatry. Co-branded between the Oxford Philosophy Handbook and IPPP (International Perspectives in Philosophy and Psychiatry) book series, the volume includes a number of features designed to reflect the dynamic two-way interplay between theory and practice that has emerged as such a key feature of the new field. Thus, 1) the topics covered include many of the standard problems of philosophy (such as consciousness, other minds, freedom, and personal identity) but these are organised into sections reflecting the stages of the clinical encounter (from first contact, through psychopathology and diagnosis to causation and thence to care and cure); 2) although predominantly philosophical in focus each chapter draws in different ways on practice-informed expertise (including clinical, scientific and service user perspectives); 3) the development of the book was supported by an international advisory board including a mental health NGO as well as academic organisations; and 4) the book is further supported by a unique web-site resource of first-hand narratives of mental disorder and other practice-based materials. In incorporating these features, The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry aims not merely to reflect the current state of the field but also to drive its further development as a distinctively philosophical contribution to twenty-first century mental health.

9780191742538 GBP310.50

https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199579563.001.0001 DOI:


Psychiatry--Philosophy.

Psychology

616.89001 / FUL/O

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