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El. knyga: Lost in Dialogue: Anthropology, Psychopathology, and Care

4.20/5 (10 ratings by Goodreads)
(Professor of Psychopathology and Dynamic Psychology, 'G. d'Annunzio' University, Chieti, Italy; Professor Adjuncto, D. Portales University, Santiago, Chile)

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To be human means to be in dialogue. Dialogue is a unitary concept used by the author to address, in a coherent way, three essential issues for clinical practice: 'What is a human being?', 'What is mental pathology'?, and 'What is care?'.

In this book Stanghellini argues that to be human means to be in dialogue with alterity, that mental pathology is the outcome of a crisis of one's dialogue with alterity, and that care is a method wherein dialogues take place whose aim is to re-enact interrupted dialogue with alterity within oneself and with the external world. This essay is an attempt to re-establish such a fragile dialogue of the soul with herself and with others.

Such an attempt is based on two pillars: a dialectic, person-centered understanding of mental disorders and values-based practice. The dialectic understanding of mental disorders acknowledges the vulnerability constitutive of human personhood. It assumes that the person is engaged in trying to cope, solve and make sense of new, disturbing, puzzling experiences stemming from her encounter with alterity. Values-based practice assumes that the forms of human life are inherently plural. Value-pluralism and recognition are the basis for care. This statement reflects the ideal of modus vivendi that aims to find terms in which different forms of life can coexist, and learn how to live with irreconcilable value conflicts, rather than striving for consensus or agreement. Care is a method wherein dialogues take place whose aim is to re-enact interrupted dialogue with alterity within oneself and with the external world. It includes practices that belong both to logic - e.g., the method for unfolding the Other's form of life and to rescue its fundamental structure - and empathy - e.g., the readiness to offer oneself as a dialoguing person and the capacity to resonate with the Other's experience and attune/regulate the emotional field.

Recenzijos

this book... will be a valuable resource for those who seek to refer to the essential work of integrating psychotherapeutical and phenomenological approaches into scientific investigation * Ragna Winniewski , Humanities Cologne in Germany and MSCA fellow in the EUmanities programme, Metapsychology Online Reviews * Stanghellini has written an interesting addition to the International Perspectives in Philosophy and Psychiatry series. It is heavily weighted to psychodynamic and phenomenological thought, and conceptually has depth and strength. * Robert A. Bischoff, PsyCRITIQUES *

Prologue 1(8)
Part One Anthropology: What is a human being?
1 We are dialogue
9(3)
2 The primacy of relation
12(3)
3 The life-world of the I--You relation
15(4)
4 The innate `You': the basic package
19(3)
5 The dialogue with alterity: narratives and the dialectic of identity
22(6)
6 A Closer Look into Alterity: Eccentricity
28(2)
7 The Uncanny and the secretly familiar double
30(3)
8 Epiphanies of alterity: drive
33(3)
9 Habitus: the emergence of alterity in social situations
36(3)
10 Emotions: the person in between moods and affects
39(3)
11 A Closer Look at Moods and Affects: Intentionality and Temporality
42(3)
12 Emotions and the dialectic of narrative identity
45(3)
13 Alterity and the recoil of one's actions
48(2)
14 Alterity and the other person: the anatomy of recognition
50(3)
15 The basic need for recognition
53(2)
16 A Logic for Recognition: Heterology
55(2)
17 An anthropology of non-recognition
57(8)
Part Two Psychopathology: What is a mental disorder?
1 First steps towards the person-centred, dialectical model of mental disorders
65(3)
2 What is a symptom?
68(3)
3 The truth about symptoms
71(4)
4 Symptom as cypher
75(5)
5 Conflicting values: the case with post partum depression
80(4)
6 The body as alterity: the case with gender dysphoria
84(5)
7 The trauma of non-recognition
89(3)
8 Erotomania and idolatrous desire
92(3)
9 Depression and the idealization of common-sense desire
95(3)
10 Borderline existence and the glorification of a thrilled flesh
98(3)
11 Schizophrenia and the disembodiment of desire
101(8)
Part Three Therapy: What is care?
1 The portrait of the clinician as a globally minded citizen
109(5)
2 The chiasm
114(3)
3 The P.H.D. method
117(6)
4 Empathy and beyond
123(8)
5 Second-order empathy
131(8)
6 Unfolding
139(8)
7 Position-taking
147(8)
8 Responsibility
155(10)
9 Perspective-taking
165(3)
10 What is a story?
168(6)
11 Personal life-history
174(5)
12 Intimacy
179(10)
Epilogue: Dialectic Method and Dialogue 189(8)
References 197(12)
Index 209
Giovanni Stanghellini, MD and Dr. Phil. honoris causa, psychiatrist and psychotherapist, is professor of Dynamic Psychology and Psychopathology at "G. d'Annunzio" University (Chieti, Italy) and Profesor Adjuncto "D. Portales" University (Santiago, Chile). He chairs the World Psychiatric Association (WPA) Section on Psychiatry and the Humanities, and the Association of European Psychiatrists (EPA) Section on Philosophy and Psychiatry. He is also founding chair of the Scuola di Psicoterapia e Fenomenologia Clinica (Florence). Among his books, all published by Oxford University Press: Nature and Narrative (co-edited with KWM Fulford, K. Morris and JZ Sadler, OUP 2003), Disembodied Spirits and Deanimated Bodies. The Psychopathology of Common Sense (OUP 2004), Emotions and Personhood (with R. Rosfort, OUP 2013), One Hundred Years of Karl Jaspers' General Psychopathology (co-edited with T. Fuchs, OUP 2013) and the Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry