
Reconceiving Schizophrenia
Oxford University Press
Published on 23. November 2006
Book
Paperback/Softback
352 pages
978-0-19-852613-1 (ISBN)
Description
Schizophrenia arguably is the most troubling, puzzling, and complex mental illness. No single discipline is equipped to understand it. Though schizophrenia has been investigated predominately from psychological, psychiatric and neurobiological perspectives, few attempts have been made to apply the tool kit of philosophy to schizophrenia, the mix of global analysis, conceptual insight, and argumentative clarity that is indicative of a philosophical perspective.
This book is a major effort at redressing that imbalance. Recent developments in the area of philosophy known as the philosophy of psychiatry have made it clear that it is time for philosophy to contribute to our understanding of schizophrenia. The range of contributions is many and varied. Some contributors are professional philosophers; some not. Some contributions focus on matters of method and history. Others argue for dramatic reforms in our understanding of schizophrenia or its symptoms. The authors in this book are committed to the idea that philosophy can indeed help to understand schizophrenia in a way which is different from but complements traditional medical-clinical approaches.
The book should appeal to every reader who wants to better understand a major mental illness, including its distinctive character, conscious content, and sources of puzzlement. Readers will find the essays gathered here afford stimulating insights into the human mind and its conditions of vulnerability.
This book is a major effort at redressing that imbalance. Recent developments in the area of philosophy known as the philosophy of psychiatry have made it clear that it is time for philosophy to contribute to our understanding of schizophrenia. The range of contributions is many and varied. Some contributors are professional philosophers; some not. Some contributions focus on matters of method and history. Others argue for dramatic reforms in our understanding of schizophrenia or its symptoms. The authors in this book are committed to the idea that philosophy can indeed help to understand schizophrenia in a way which is different from but complements traditional medical-clinical approaches.
The book should appeal to every reader who wants to better understand a major mental illness, including its distinctive character, conscious content, and sources of puzzlement. Readers will find the essays gathered here afford stimulating insights into the human mind and its conditions of vulnerability.
Reviews / Votes
The volume contains many thought-provoking and worthwhile contributions, with little overlap of content, and all of them deserve detailed consideration. It serves as an amazing achievement of conceptual rigor in thinking about schizophrenia. * British Journal of Psychiatry, * This book is an inspiring and rigorous overview of philosophy's attempts to understand schizophrenia and is worthwhile reading fro anyone - practitioner, academic, or individual - challenged by this most distressing of disorders. * Mental Health Today *More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Oxford
United Kingdom
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Thickness: 19 mm
Weight
535 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-852613-1 (9780198526131)
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Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Man Cheung Chung | Bill Fulford | George Graham
Reconceiving Schizophrenia
E-Book
11/2006
1st Edition
OUP Oxford
€69.30
Available for download
Persons
Man Cheung Chung earned his B.A. in Psychology and Sociology at the University of Guelph, Canada, and PhD at the University of Sheffield, United Kingdom. He worked as a Research Psychologist at University College London. He then took on a Research Fellowship at the University of Birmingham and subsequently held lectureships at the Universities of Wolverhampton and Sheffield. He is now a Reader in the Clinical Psychology Teaching Unit at the University of Plymouth. He is also an Associate Fellow of the British Psychological Society. His research interests include history and philosophy of psychology and health/clinical psychology. He has published over 100 articles and chapters in the foregoing areas as well as on other diverse topics.
Before joining the faculty of Wake Forest in 2003, Graham served for more than twenty-five years on the faculty at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB), including seventeen as philosophy department chair. Graham's research focuses on topics in philosophy of mind, cognitive science, and psychiatry.
Before joining the faculty of Wake Forest in 2003, Graham served for more than twenty-five years on the faculty at the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB), including seventeen as philosophy department chair. Graham's research focuses on topics in philosophy of mind, cognitive science, and psychiatry.
Editor
Reader of Psychology, Clinical Psychology Teaching UnitReader of Psychology in the Clinical Psychology Teaching Unit, School of Applied Psychosocial Studies, University of Plymouth, UK
Department of Philosophy and the Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK
Professor of Philosophy and Associate Faculty Neuroscience InstituteA C Reid Professor of Philosophy and Adjunct Faculty Graduate Program in Neuroscience, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, USA
Content
1. Introduction: on reconceiving schizophrenia ; 2. They diagnosed me a schizophrenic when I was just a Gemini. 'The other side of madness' ; 3. Conceptions of schizophrenia ; 4. Explaining schizophrenia: the relevance of phenomenology ; 5. Schizophrenic delusion and hallucination as the expression and consequence of an alteration of the existential a prioris ; 6. Schizophrenia: a phenomenological-anthropological approach ; 7. Schizophrenia and the sixth sense ; 8. The paralogisms of psychosis ; 9. How to move beyond the concept of schizophrenia ; 10. The delusional stance ; 11. Against the belief model of delusion ; 12. The clinician's illusion and benign psychosis ; 13. Defining persecutory paranoia ; 14. The functions of delusional beliefs ; 15. The logical basis of psychiatric meta-narratives ; 16. Suspicions of schizophrenia