Schizophrenia and intersubjectivity: An embodied and enactive approach to psychopathology and psychotherapy

Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 24 (2):127-142 (2017)
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Abstract

Schizophrenia is a mental disorder that calls the mineness of one's own sensations, thoughts and actions into question and threatens the person with a loss of self. In order to understand this illness in its essence, an approach based on phenomenological psychopathology is therefore indispensable. Conversely, disorders of the self in schizophrenia should be of crucial interest for any philosophy of subjectivity in order to test its concepts of self-awareness, personhood and intersubjectivity by reference to empirical phenomena.Contemporary neurobiological concepts of schizophrenia predominantly emphasize the importance of impaired integration of somatosensory inputs into stable central-nervous representations...

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