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El. knyga: Emotions and Personhood: Exploring Fragility - Making Sense of Vulnerability [Oxford Medicine Online E-books]

(Professor of Psychopathology and Dynamic Psychology, 'G. d'Annunzio' University, Chieti, Italy; Professor Adjuncto, D. Portales University, Santiago, Chile), (Sųren Kierkegaard Research Centre, University of Copenhagen, Denmark)
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Emotions and personhood are important notions within the field of mental health care. How they are related, is less evident. This book provides a framework for understanding the important and complex relationship between our emotional wellbeing and our sense of self, drawing on psychopathology, philosophy, and phenomenology.

How does a person experience emotions? What is the relationship between the experiential and biological dimensions of emotions? How do emotions figure in a person's relation to the world and to other people? How do emotions feature in human vulnerability to mental illness? Do they play a significant role in the fragile balance between mental health and illness? If emotions are in fact significant, how are they relevant for treatment?

Emotions and personhood are important notions within the field of mental health care. What they are, and how they are related though, is less evident. This book provides a framework for understanding this relationship. The authors argue for an account of emotions and personhood that attempts to understand human emotions from the combined approach of philosophy and psychopathology, taking its models particularly from hermeneutical phenomenology and from dialectical psychopathology. Within the book, the authors develop a basic set of concepts for understanding what emotional experience means for a human person, with the assumption that human emotional experience is fragile - a fact which entails vulnerability to mental disturbance.

Drawing on research from psychiatry, psychopathology, philosophy, and neuroscience, the book will be valuable for both students and researchers in these disciplines, and more broadly, within the field of mental health.
Introduction 1(18)
How Do You Feel?
3(1)
Emotions, Human Beings, and Persons
4(5)
The Embodied Nature of Emotions
9(2)
Emotions and Psychopathological Vulnerability
11(1)
Overview of the
Chapters
12(7)
Part I Troubled Selfhood
1 Subjectivity and Naturalism
19(34)
Philosophy and Psychopathology in View of Naturalism
19(4)
Relaxed Naturalism
23(4)
A Phenomenological Alternative
27(2)
Hermeneutical Phenomenology
29(3)
Why Ricoeur's Theory?
32(8)
Reason and Sensibility
40(6)
Wounded Thinking
46(7)
2 A Hermeneutics of `I Am'
53(18)
The Affective Generation of Values
54(3)
Fragility of the Heart
57(6)
Interpretative Recovery of Selfhood
63(3)
Narratives of Time
66(5)
3 Body and Personhood
71(28)
Bodily Ambivalence
72(7)
Personhood and the Narrating Self
79(7)
Rules and Practices
86(2)
The Good Life
88(4)
An Ontology of Care
92(1)
Becoming a Person through Otherness
93(6)
Part II Fragile Personhood
4 Conceptual Clarity Amidst an Abundance of Feelings
99(34)
To Name or Not to Name a Feeling
100(4)
Feeling Theories
104(3)
Cognitive Theories
107(3)
Narrative Theories
110(5)
Neuroscientific Investigations of Emotions
115(14)
Concepts, Phenomenology, and Ontology
129(4)
5 Ambivalent Personhood
133(16)
Ontological Ambiguity
134(3)
The Personal Animal
137(5)
Identity and Feelings of Ambivalence
142(7)
6 Emotions and Personhood
149(39)
The Feeling of Emotion
150(5)
A Choreography of Emotions
155(8)
Moods and Affects
163(3)
Intentionality and Temporality
166(4)
Narrating Our Emotions
170(10)
A Hermeneutics of Care
180(8)
7 The Feeling Brain
188(33)
Considerations on Evolution and Intentionality
189(3)
Spinoza, Ricoeur, and Neuroscience on the Conatus
192(6)
Evolutionary Well-Being
198(4)
The Pragmatic Meaning of Life
202(10)
Bad Moods, Personhood, and Vulnerability
212(9)
Part III Vulnerable Minds
8 Schizophrenia as a Disorder of Mood
221(40)
The Clinical Phenomenology of Schizophrenia
222(6)
Delusional Mood, Perplexity, and the End-of-the-World Experience
228(2)
The Unfathomed Flatness of Lived Space
230(5)
The Objectualisation of Material Things
235(1)
The Disintegration of Temporality
236(5)
The Source of Vitality
241(5)
Disattunement and Disincarnation
246(2)
Disembodiment and Appearance of Things
248(4)
A Hermeneutics of Schizophrenic Life-Worlds
252(5)
Metaphysical Enactment
257(4)
9 Borderland
261(35)
Between Dysphoria and Anger
261(3)
Varieties of Bad Moods and Mood Disorders
264(8)
Lived Time, Other Persons, and Otherness
272(3)
Invalidation Trauma
275(2)
Temporal Fragmentation and Narrative Identity
277(3)
Otherness Lost and Found
280(4)
Indignation, Resignation, and Retaliation
284(3)
Give Us Our Daily Trauma
287(3)
A Hermeneutics of Traumatic Existence
290(2)
A Miscarried Hermeneutics of the I Am
292(4)
10 Emotions, Vulnerability, and a Therapy of Care
296(23)
The Fragile Dialectic of Selfhood and Otherness
296(6)
Disintegration of Logos and Pathos
302(4)
A Dialectical Conception of Mental Illness
306(4)
Towards a Therapy of Care
310(9)
References 319(14)
Index 333