令人信服的理由

IF 2.6 0 PHILOSOPHY Philosophy Psychiatry & Psychology Pub Date : 2023-03-01 DOI:10.1353/ppp.2023.0005
Tim Thornton
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It seemed plausible to me that the irreducibility of the space of reasons to the realm of law might have interesting consequences for psychiatry. But mine was a purely disinterested academic interest. This is perhaps the usual approach to what is in part a professionalized academic subject with its formal rules for publication and dissemination of research. It has only been in the last decade that I have experienced things in a more personal way, following what I would term, though psychiatry would not, a nervous breakdown. My image of a breakdown came from reading Saul Bellow's novel Herzog. The titular Herzog has been left by his wife, cruelly, and retires from academic life to write letters. For example, to Heidegger. \"Dear Doktor Professor Heidegger, I should like to know what you mean by the expression 'the fall into the quotidian.' When did this fall occur? Where were we standing when it happened?\" I thought I would be able to maintain some sort of inquiring mind and write experientially grounded philosophy of psychiatry as a catharsis. I could study my own illness. This immediately proved a ridiculous hope. As a philosopher with a cognitivist bent—language, thought, and intentionality being guiding interests—I had always assumed that madness was only really a matter of what Jaspers calls 'primary delusions,' belief-like states that strain their belief-status, are hard for others to make sense of, and occur only with particularly severe forms of mental illness. But madness is also a matter of doing, saying and feeling as well as pure reasoning. What I would, previously and disinterestedly, have described as a dysregulation of emotional reactions turned out to transform my entire experience of the world and my ability to think rationally about it. I lost the ability to put my experiences into words. In truth, I lost all interest in that project. Only when not distressed could I take a view on my loss of world. Distressed, I did not understand myself. This is a neat illustration of epistemic disjunctivism. But it also highlights a challenge for, and some of the brilliance in those who have contributed to, the philosophy of mental health care, through their expertise by experience. While experience may be a necessary condition for particular forms of expertise, my own case reveals that it is not sufficient. Further, even an everyday and familiar mental illness (like my own) can render the articulation of experience, in a way that makes sense to others, very much harder. Hence the fact [End Page 11] that there is a thriving mental health service and patient movement, making their own experiences available to others combining first-person narratives with conceptual and phenomenological insight is both admirable and helps to set a part of PPP's future agenda: bringing first-person experience within a philosophically and clinically informed discipline. [End Page 12] Tim Thornton Tim Thornton, MA, MPhil, PhD, DLitt, is Professor of Philosophy and Mental Health and Mental Health and Deputy Head for Research in the School of Nursing at the University of Central Lancashire. As well as contemporary philosophy of thought and language, his research concerns conceptual issues at the heart of mental health care. He has published research papers on clinical judgement, idiographic and narrative understanding, the interpretation of psychopathology and reductionism and social constructionism in psychiatry. 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What I would, previously and disinterestedly, have described as a dysregulation of emotional reactions turned out to transform my entire experience of the world and my ability to think rationally about it. I lost the ability to put my experiences into words. In truth, I lost all interest in that project. Only when not distressed could I take a view on my loss of world. Distressed, I did not understand myself. This is a neat illustration of epistemic disjunctivism. But it also highlights a challenge for, and some of the brilliance in those who have contributed to, the philosophy of mental health care, through their expertise by experience. While experience may be a necessary condition for particular forms of expertise, my own case reveals that it is not sufficient. Further, even an everyday and familiar mental illness (like my own) can render the articulation of experience, in a way that makes sense to others, very much harder. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

Tim Thornton, MA, MPhil, PhD, DLitt(生物)有很多令人信服的理由让我们对精神病学哲学感兴趣。1994年,当比尔·富尔福德(Bill Fulford)说服我走过华威大学(Warwick University)的走廊,加入他的教学——这似乎是一门新兴学科——尽管我曾表示自己对精神卫生保健一无所知——我的主要兴趣在于,用塞拉斯的话说,意义不可约化到“(自然科学)法则的领域”。这补充了比尔对精神病学中不可约性和核心价值的拥护。(直到后来,我们才意识到,在规范和价值观是主观偏好还是世界的客观特征这一并非无关紧要的问题上,我们存在分歧。)在我看来,理性空间对法律领域的不可约性可能会对精神病学产生有趣的影响,这似乎是合理的。但我的兴趣纯粹是无私的学术兴趣。这也许是通常的方法,在某种程度上,这是一个专业的学术课题,它有正式的出版和传播研究的规则。直到最近十年,我才以一种更私人的方式经历了一些事情,我将其称为精神崩溃,尽管精神病学不会这么说。我对精神崩溃的印象来自索尔·贝娄的小说《赫尔佐格》。名义上的赫尔佐格被他的妻子残忍地抛弃,退出了学术生活,开始写信。例如,对海德格尔。“亲爱的海德格尔博士教授,我想知道你所说的‘陷入日常生活’是什么意思。这个秋天是什么时候发生的?事情发生的时候,我们站在什么地方?”我以为我可以保持某种好奇的头脑,写一些以经验为基础的精神病学哲学,作为一种宣泄。我可以研究我自己的病。这立即被证明是一个荒谬的希望。作为一名具有认知主义倾向的哲学家——语言、思想和意向性都是我的指导兴趣——我一直认为,疯狂实际上只是贾斯贝尔斯所说的“初级妄想”,是一种类似信念的状态,使他们的信仰状态变得紧张,其他人很难理解,只有在特别严重的精神疾病中才会出现。但疯狂不仅是纯粹的推理,也是一种行为、言语和感觉。我以前会公正地描述为情绪反应失调,结果却改变了我对世界的整个体验和理性思考的能力。我失去了用语言表达我的经历的能力。事实上,我对那个项目完全失去了兴趣。只有在不苦恼的时候,我才能正视我所失去的世界。我很苦恼,不了解自己。这是认识论分离论的一个很好的例证。但这也凸显了对精神卫生保健哲学的挑战,以及那些通过他们的专业知识和经验为之做出贡献的人的一些杰出之处。虽然经验可能是特定形式的专业知识的必要条件,但我自己的案例表明,它是不够的。此外,即使是一种日常和熟悉的精神疾病(比如我自己的),也会以一种对他人有意义的方式,使经验的表达变得更加困难。因此,有一个蓬勃发展的心理健康服务和患者运动,将他们自己的经历与概念和现象学的洞察力结合起来,将第一人称叙述与概念和现象学的洞察力相结合,这既令人钦佩,又有助于设定PPP未来议程的一部分:将第一人称体验纳入哲学和临床知情的学科。Tim Thornton, MA, MPhil, PhD, DLitt,是中央兰开夏大学护理学院哲学与心理健康和心理健康教授和研究副主任。除了当代思想和语言哲学之外,他的研究还涉及精神卫生保健的核心概念问题。他发表了关于临床判断、具体和叙事理解、精神病理学解释以及精神病学中的还原论和社会建构论的研究论文。版权所有©2023约翰霍普金斯大学出版社
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Compelling Reasons
Compelling Reasons Tim Thornton, MA, MPhil, PhD, DLitt (bio) There are many compelling reasons to have an interest in the philosophy of/and psychiatry. In 1994, when persuaded by Bill Fulford to walk down the corridor at Warwick University to join in his teaching of what seemed a newly developing subject—against my protestations that I knew nothing about mental health care—my main interest was in the irreducibility of meaning to the 'realm of [natural scientific] law,' in Sellars's phrase. This had the bonus of complementing Bill's championing of the irreducibility and centrality of values in psychiatry. (It was only later we realized we disagreed about the not inconsequential issue of whether norms and values were subjective preferences or objective features of the world.) It seemed plausible to me that the irreducibility of the space of reasons to the realm of law might have interesting consequences for psychiatry. But mine was a purely disinterested academic interest. This is perhaps the usual approach to what is in part a professionalized academic subject with its formal rules for publication and dissemination of research. It has only been in the last decade that I have experienced things in a more personal way, following what I would term, though psychiatry would not, a nervous breakdown. My image of a breakdown came from reading Saul Bellow's novel Herzog. The titular Herzog has been left by his wife, cruelly, and retires from academic life to write letters. For example, to Heidegger. "Dear Doktor Professor Heidegger, I should like to know what you mean by the expression 'the fall into the quotidian.' When did this fall occur? Where were we standing when it happened?" I thought I would be able to maintain some sort of inquiring mind and write experientially grounded philosophy of psychiatry as a catharsis. I could study my own illness. This immediately proved a ridiculous hope. As a philosopher with a cognitivist bent—language, thought, and intentionality being guiding interests—I had always assumed that madness was only really a matter of what Jaspers calls 'primary delusions,' belief-like states that strain their belief-status, are hard for others to make sense of, and occur only with particularly severe forms of mental illness. But madness is also a matter of doing, saying and feeling as well as pure reasoning. What I would, previously and disinterestedly, have described as a dysregulation of emotional reactions turned out to transform my entire experience of the world and my ability to think rationally about it. I lost the ability to put my experiences into words. In truth, I lost all interest in that project. Only when not distressed could I take a view on my loss of world. Distressed, I did not understand myself. This is a neat illustration of epistemic disjunctivism. But it also highlights a challenge for, and some of the brilliance in those who have contributed to, the philosophy of mental health care, through their expertise by experience. While experience may be a necessary condition for particular forms of expertise, my own case reveals that it is not sufficient. Further, even an everyday and familiar mental illness (like my own) can render the articulation of experience, in a way that makes sense to others, very much harder. Hence the fact [End Page 11] that there is a thriving mental health service and patient movement, making their own experiences available to others combining first-person narratives with conceptual and phenomenological insight is both admirable and helps to set a part of PPP's future agenda: bringing first-person experience within a philosophically and clinically informed discipline. [End Page 12] Tim Thornton Tim Thornton, MA, MPhil, PhD, DLitt, is Professor of Philosophy and Mental Health and Mental Health and Deputy Head for Research in the School of Nursing at the University of Central Lancashire. As well as contemporary philosophy of thought and language, his research concerns conceptual issues at the heart of mental health care. He has published research papers on clinical judgement, idiographic and narrative understanding, the interpretation of psychopathology and reductionism and social constructionism in psychiatry. Copyright © 2023 Johns Hopkins University Press
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