
Contents
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Philosophy Becoming Clinical Philosophy Becoming Clinical
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Braiding Phenomenological Analysis Braiding Phenomenological Analysis
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Structural Analysis Structural Analysis
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Transcendental Analysis Transcendental Analysis
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Encountering Encountering
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Bibliography Bibliography
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27 Clinical Phenomenology: Descriptive, Structural, and Transcendental Phenomenology
Get accessDorothée Legrand is a researcher at “Archives Husserl” (ENS, CNRS, Paris). She holds a PhD in philosophy and is trained in clinical psychology. Thematically, her work focuses on the notion of selfhood and subjectivity. Her publications include ‘Subjective and Physical Dimensions of Bodily Self-Consciousness, and their Dis-integration in Anorexia Nervosa’ (Neuropsychologia 2010) and, with P. Ruby, ‘What is Self Specific? A Theoretical Investigation and a Critical Review of Neuroimaging Results’ (Psychological Review 2009). She is also the editor of Dimensions of Bodily Subjectivity (2009).
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Published:07 March 2018
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Abstract
Clinical phenomenology weaves descriptive, structural, and transcendental threads. At the descriptive level, phenomenology does not end but starts with the confrontation to that which does not immediately appear in consciousness; an analysis is already required here, which brackets the dichotomy between normal and pathological, to consider the meaning of being human. Structurally, clinical phenomenology may perform an anthropological analysis aiming at characterizing the organization of any individual life; or it may seek to assume an ontological scope to determine the human openness to Being prevailing before intentionality cuts the subject apart from objects. A transcendental analysis may consider that the foundation of being-human is rooted in an anonymous, asubjective source of experience, to which one’s receptive openness would be impaired in psychopathology. In clinical phenomenology, one ought to consider how these different philosophical orientations may impact the encounter between a patient and a clinician.
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