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9780198744252

The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry

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  • ISBN13:

    9780198744252

  • ISBN10:

    0198744250

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2015-05-05
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press
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Summary

Philosophy has much to offer psychiatry, not least regarding ethical issues, but also issues regarding the mind, identity, values, and volition. This has become only more important as we have witnessed the growth and power of the pharmaceutical industry, accompanied by developments in the neurosciences. However, too few practicing psychiatrists are familiar with the literature in this area.

The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry offers the most comprehensive reference resource for this area ever published. It assembles challenging and insightful contributions from key philosophers and others to the interactive fields of philosophy and psychiatry. Each contributions is original, stimulating, thorough, and clearly and engagingly written - with no potentially significant philosophical stone left unturned. Broad in scope, the book includes coverage of several areas of philosophy, including philosophy of mind, science, and ethics.

For philosophers and psychiatrists, The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry is a landmark publication in the field - one that will be of value to both students and researchers in this rapidly growing area.

Author Biography


KWM Fulford, St Cross College, Oxford, UK,Martin Davies, Corpus Christi College, Oxford, UK,Richard Gipps, University Counselling Service, University of Oxford, UK,George Graham, Department of Philosophy, Georgia State University, USA,John Sadler, Division of Ethics, Department of Psychiatry, UT Southwestern, USA,Giovanni Stanghellini, Universita G. d'Annunzio' Chieti, Italy,Tim Thornton, School of Health, University of Central Lancashire, UK

Table of Contents


1. The Next Hundred Years: Watching our Ps and Q
Section One: History
2. Introduction
3. The insanity defense as a history of mental disorder, Daniel Robinson
4. Mental health as moral virtue: some ancient arguments, Terence Irwin
5. Aristotle, Plato and the Anti-Psychiatrists: Comment on Irwin, Edward Harcourt
6. Wilhelm Griesinger: Philosophy as origin of a new psychiatry, Katherine Arens
7. The Philosophical Roots of Karl Jaspers' General Psychopathology, Christoph Mundt
8. From Madness to Mental Illness: Psychiatry and Biopolitics in Michel Foucault, Federico Leoni
9. The epistemological value of depression memoirs: a meta-analysis, 1. Jennifer Radden and Somogy Varga
Section Two: Contexts of Care
10. Introduction
11. Challenges to the Modernist Identity of Psychiatry: User Empowerment and Recovery, Pat Bracken and Philip Thomas
12. Race and gender in philosophy of psychiatry: science, relativism and phenomenology, Marilyn Nissim-Sabat
13. Why Psychiatry Should Fear Medicalization, Louis C. Charland
14. Technology And Psychiatry, James Phillips
15. Cure and Recovery, Larry Davidson
Section Three: Establishing Relationships
16. Introduction
17. Varieties of Self-Awareness, Thor Grunbaum and Dan Zahavi
18. Interpersonal Relating, Daniel D. Hutto
19. Intersubjectivity and psychopathology, Shaun Gallagher
20. Other Minds, Autism, and Depth in Human Interaction, Anita Avramides
21. Empathic foundations of clinical knowledge, Nancy Nyquist Potter
22. Discourse and diseases of the psyche, Grant Gillett and Rom Harre
23. Philosophical Resources for the Psychiatric Interview, Giovanni Stanghellini
Section Four: Summoning Concepts
24. Introduction
25. Naturalistic Accounts of Mental Disorder, Elselijn Kingma
26. Values-based practice: topsy-turvy take home messages from ordinary language philosophy (and a few next steps), KWM Fulford and CW van Staden
27. Cognitive Science and Explanations of Psychopathology, Kelso Cratsley and Richard Samuels
28. What is Mental Illness?, Derek Bolton
29. Vice and Mental Disorders, John Z. Sadler
30. Rationality and Sanity: The role of rationality judgements in understanding psychiatric disorders, Lisa Bortolotti
31. Boundary Problems: Negotiating the Challenges of Responsibility and Loss, Jennifer Church
32. Ordering Disorder: Mental disorder, brain disorder, and therapeutic Intervention, George Graham
33. Mental Disorder: Can Merleau-Ponty take us beyond the "Mind-Brain" problem?, Eric Matthews
Section Five: Descriptive Psychopathology
34. Introduction
35. Anxiety and phobias: Phenomenologies, concepts, explanations, Gerrit Glas
36. Depression and the phenomenology of free will, Matthew Ratcliffe
37. Body image disorders, Katherine J. Morris
38. The phenomenology of affectivity, Thomas Fuchs
39. Delusion: The phenomenological approach, Louis Sass and Elizabeth Pienkos
40. Thought insertion, self-awareness, and rationality, Johannes Roessler
41. The disunity of consciousness in psychiatric disorders, Tim Bayne
42. Delusion: Cognitive approaches - Bayesian inference and compartmentalization, Martin Davies and Andy Egan
Section Six: Assessment and Diagnostic Categories
43. Introduction
44. Mapping the Domain of Mental Illness, Jeffrey Poland and Barbara Von Eckardt
45. Values in psychiatric diagnosis and classification, John Z. Sadler
46. Conceptual and ethical issues in the Prodromal Phase of Psychosis, Matthew Broome, Paolo Fusar-Poli, and Philippe Wuyts
47. Understanding Mania and Depression, S. Nassir Ghaemi
48. Autism and the Philosophy of Mind, R. Peter Hobson
49. Dementia is dead, long live ageing: Philosophy and practice in connection with "dementia", Julian C. Hughes
50. What is Addiction?, Walter Sinnott-Armstrong and Hanna Pickard
51. Identity and Addiction: What alcoholic memoirs teach, Owen Flanagan
52. Personality Disorder and Validity: A History of Controversy, Peter Zachar and Robert F. Krueger
53. Personal Identity and Identity Disorders, Stephen R.L. Clark
Section Seven: Explanation and Understanding
54. Introduction
55. Causation and Mechanisms in Psychiatry, John Campbell
56. Natural Kinds, Rachel Cooper
57. The Medical Model and the Philosophy of Science, Dominic Murphy
58. Reliability, Validity, and the Mixed Blessings of Operationalism, Nick Haslam
59. Reduction and Reductionism in Psychiatry, Kenneth F. Schaffner
60. Diagnostic Prediction and Prognosis: Getting from Symptom to Treatment, Michael A. Bishop and J.D. Trout
61. Clinical judgment, tacit knowledge and recognition in psychiatric diagnosis, Tim Thornton
62. Neural Mechanisms of Decision Making and the Personal Level, Nicholas Shea
63. Psychopathology and the Enactive Mind, Giovanna Colombetti
64. Could psychoanalysis be a science?, Michael Lacewing
Section Eight: Cure and Care
65. Introduction
66. Responsibility without Blame: Philosophical Reflections on Clinical Practice, Hanna Pickard
67. Depression, Decisional Capacity, and Personal Autonomy, Lubomira Radoilska
68. Psychopharmacology and the Self, Fredrik Svenaeus
69. Practical neuropsychiatric Ethics, Bennett Foddy, Guy Kahane, and Julian Savulescu
70. Placebo Effects in Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, David A. Jopling
71. Being Unconscious: Heidegger and Freud, Richard Askay and Jensen Farquhar
72. Assumptions behind CBT: a philosophical appraisal, Richard Gipps
73. Understanding and Healing: Psychiatry and Psychoanalysis in the Era of Neuroscience, Jim Hopkins

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