
Psychiatry as a Human Science: Phenomenological, Hermeneutical and Lacanian Perspectives: 18
Author(s): Antoine Mooij (Author)
- Publisher: Editions Rodopi B.V.
- Publication Date: 1 Jan. 2012
- Language: English
- Print length: 308 pages
- ISBN-10: 904203596X
- ISBN-13: 9789042035966
Book Description
Editorial Reviews
Review
“…posits some compelling challenges to conventional psychiatry. … Overall, Psychiatry as a Human Science is a very convincing critique of the medical discourse in psychiatry and its neglect of subjective psychiatry. It does insightfully capture many of the concepts and ideas that a hermeneutic approach might draw on in order to redress this neglect. … The book will probably be the most important for psychiatrists though; firstly, because Mooij’s self-reflexive critique of the theories underpinning conventional psychiatry is excellent and secondly, for those new to hermeneutics, this book does provide an extensive (though not altogether accessible) introduction to many of the central ideas in a hermeneutic approach to psychiatry. … Hopefully all readers will be encouraged to consider the crucial importance of engaging with the subjective psychic reality of mental illness and some of the ways the hermeneutic approach attempts to do so. This point alone makes the book well worth reading.” – in: Metapsychology 17/28 (9 July 2013)
About the Author
,”datePublished”:”1 Jan. 2012″,”isbn”:”9789042035966″,”numberOfPages”:308,”inLanguage”:”English”,”description”:”Psychiatry or psychopathology finds itself in a state of imbalance. The reason: the impossibility to unite biological and psychological factors. Effectively, this leads to the psychic reality being largely ignored. And yet psychiatry as a human science will have to acknowledge the psychic reality: the human capacity to symbolise reality. This book demonstrates that phenomenology, hermeneutics and Lacanian psychoanalysis support this view, whilst also drawing on Cassirer’s theory of symbolization. In the domain of psychopathology, this convergence and the conceptual space it brings offer an opportunity to create cross-fertilisation, enlarging the Lacanian clinical perspective. It will result in a philosophical conception of man as animal symbolicum, an animal fallen prey to language. In sum, the book renders a contribution to Lacanian psychopathology, to the philosophy of psychiatry and to philosophical anthropology. It is of interest to psychiatrists, psychologists, psychoanalysts and philosophers alike.”,”url”:”https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/904203596X/”,”bookFormat”:”http://schema.org/EBook”,”additionalType”:”http://schema.org/PDF”,”fileSize”:”57 MB”,”accessibilityFeature”:[“login required”,”member access only”],”accessibilitySummary”:”PDF version available to authenticated members only. File size: 57 MB.”}
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