
Contents
34 Introduction: Descriptive Psychopathology
Get accessK. W. M. (Bill) Fulford, Fellow of St Catherine’s College and Member of the Philosophy Faculty, University of Oxford, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy and Mental Health, University of Warwick, and Founder Editor, Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology; formerly Special Advisor for Values-based Practice and member of the Mental Health Bill team, Department of Health, UK
Martin Davies, Corpus Christi College, University of Oxford
Dr. Richard Gipps is a clinical psychologist in private psychotherapy practice in Oxford, UK, and an associate of the Philosophy Faculty at the University of Oxford. He convenes the Philosophy Special Interest Group of the Institute of Psychoanalysis, the Oxford Interdisciplinary Seminars in Psychoanalysis, and the Making the Unconscious Conscious seminar series. His research interests lie in psychoanalysis, psychosis, existential phenomenology, and Wittgenstein.
George Graham is a Professor Philosophy and Neuroscience at Georgia State University in Atlanta, Georgia.
John Z. Sadler, The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas, USA
Giovanni Stanghellini, Università degli Studi G. d’Annunzio Chieti e Pescara, Italy
Tim Thornton, School of Health, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, UK
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Published:05 September 2013
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Abstract
Following on from Section IV on summoning concepts, this section of the Handbook presents theoretically informed descriptions of psychopathologies. The topics of the chapters range from anxiety, depression, and body image disorders, through emotion and affective disorders, to delusion, thought insertion, and the fragmentation of consciousness. These phenomena call, not only for assessment and diagnosis (see Section VI), but also for understanding on the part of both the engaged clinician and the philosophical commentator. They also provide case studies for general philosophical questions about different levels of description and conceptualisation and the relationships between them, and about the contributions to psychological understanding that are made by phenomenology, clinical expert knowledge, and the sciences of the mind.
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