Reclaiming the Self in Psychiatry: Centering Personal Narratives for Humanist Science diagnoses the fundamental problem in contemporary scientific psychiatry to be a lack of a sophisticated and nuanced engagement with the self and proposes a solution the Multitudinous Self Model (MuSe).
Reclaiming the Self in Psychiatry: Centering Personal Narratives for Humanist Science diagnoses the fundamental problem in contemporary scientific psychiatry to be a lack of a sophisticated and nuanced engagement with the self and proposes a solutionthe Multitudinous Self Model (MuSe).
MuSe fulfils psychiatrys twin commitments to patients flourishing and scientific objectivity. Marshalling the conceptual and empirical resources from testimonies from individuals diagnosed with mental disorders, substantive research in cognitive science, and empirically informed philosophy, MuSe provides clinicians, scientists, and patients pathways to respond to mental distresses and disorders. This framework boosts psychiatrys relationship to science by facilitating expansive notions of expertise and objectivity in which some patients are recognized as experience-based experts whose contributions to psychiatric knowledge are indispensable. Serife Tekin draws the contours of a future for psychiatry that is grounded in philosophy, medical humanities, and social sciences as much as physiology and neuroscience.
This book is an ideal read for professional psychiatrists and philosophers of psychiatry who are interested in the philosophy of mental health.
Part I
Chapter 1: Mental Disorder and the Self
Chapter 2: Psychiatry and Science
Chapter 3: Epistemic and Ethical Costs of Neglecting the Self in Psychiatry
Part II
Chapter 4: The Multitudinous Self
Chapter 5: The Multitudinous Self Model, Mental Disorders
Chapter 6: The Multitudinous Self Model, Flourishing, and Science
Chapter 7: The Multitudinous Self Model and Substance Use Disorders
erife Tekin, PhD, is an associate professor at the Center for Bioethics and Humanities at SUNY Upstate Medical University in Syracuse, NY. She coedited The Handbook of Psychiatric Ethics (Oxford University Press, 2021), The Bloomsbury Companion to Philosophy and Psychiatry (Bloomsbury, 2019), and Extraordinary Science and Psychiatry: Responses to the Crisis in Mental Health Research (MIT Press, 2017). Her articles appeared in Philosophy of Science; Synthese; American Journal of Bioethics, and elsewhere.