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Social Anxiety, Self-Consciousness, and Interpersonal Experience

From the book Empathy, Intersubjectivity, and the Social World

  • Anna Bortolan

Abstract

The chapter explores some aspects of the relationship between selfconsciousness and consciousness of others, by looking in particular at the phenomenology of social anxiety disorder. More specifically, drawing on the phenomenological distinction between pre-reflective and reflective self-consciousness, and its application to the study of schizophrenia spectrum disorders, I suggest that the disturbances of social experience characteristic of social anxiety disorder are rooted in certain alterations of self-experience, and I endeavour to provide an account of the latter. More specifically, I claim that a) pathological social anxiety involves a heightening of the subject’s reflective self-consciousness, and b) that this, at least partly, originates in the experience of a low sense of self-worth, which I refer to as low “self-esteem”, and conceive of as a particular kind of background affective orientation.

© 2022 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston
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