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Continental Philosophy of Psychiatry = The Lure of Madness /
Record Type:
Language materials, printed : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Continental Philosophy of Psychiatry / by Alastair Morgan.
Reminder of title:
The Lure of Madness /
Author:
Morgan, Alastair.
Description:
XIII, 421 p.online resource. :
Contained By:
Springer Nature eBook
Subject:
Medicine—Philosophy. -
Online resource:
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-09334-0
ISBN:
9783031093340
Continental Philosophy of Psychiatry = The Lure of Madness /
Morgan, Alastair.
Continental Philosophy of Psychiatry
The Lure of Madness /[electronic resource] :by Alastair Morgan. - 1st ed. 2022. - XIII, 421 p.online resource.
Chapter 1: Introduction -- Part I: Three Inclusive Exclusions -- Chapter 2: “A subtle, pervasive and strangely uncertain light”: Jaspers on understanding madness -- Chapter 3: “As strange to me as the birds in the garden”: Bleuler, Jung and the creation of schizophrenia -- Chapter 4: A distance from all that is human: Freud and Psychosis -- Part II: Through a glass darkly -- Chapter 5: Vital Contact -- Chapter 6: Ipseity -- Chapter 7: The Body -- Chapter 8: Being-in-the-world -- Part III: It’s a Mad world -- Chapter 9: “The world cannot acknowledge its own madness”: alienation and the destruction of experience -- Chapter 10: Reification and Schizophrenia – a socio-pathological parallelism -- Chapter 11: Beware, Marcuse! -- Chapter 12: “O my body. . .”: Fanon and the pathologies of recognition -- Part IV: “A certain madness must watch over thinking” -- Chapter 13: “In the distance of madness”: Foucault and the History of Madness -- Chapter 14: The lure of madness -- Chapter 15: Lacan: the shadow of madness -- Chapter 16: The ineffable and limit-experience -- Part V: Anti -Psychiatry and madness -- Chapter 17: Capitalism and schizophrenia -- Chapter 18: A germinal anti-psychiatry: R.D. Laing’s wild empathy -- Chapter 19: “It all began with a ‘no’”: The Institution negated -- Chapter 20: Epilogue – The end of madness?. .
This book explores how the continental philosophical tradition in the 20th century attempted to understand madness as madness. It traces the paradoxical endeavour of reason attempting to understand madness without dissolving the inherent strangeness and otherness of madness. It provides a comprehensive overview of the contributions of phenomenology, critical theory, psychoanalysis, post-structuralism and anti-psychiatry to continental philosophy and psychiatry. The book outlines an intellectual tradition of psychiatry that is both fascinated by and withdraws from madness. Madness is a lure for philosophy in two senses; as both trap and provocation. It is a trap because this philosophical tradition constructs an otherness of madness so profound, that it condemns madness to silence. However, the idea of madness as another world is also a fertile provocation because it respects the non-identity of madness to reason. The book concludes with some critical reflections on the role of madness in contemporary philosophical thought. Alastair Morgan is a Senior Lecturer, University of Manchester, UK.
ISBN: 9783031093340
Standard No.: 10.1007/978-3-031-09334-0doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
1253490
Medicine—Philosophy.
LC Class. No.: R723-723.7
Dewey Class. No.: 610.1
Continental Philosophy of Psychiatry = The Lure of Madness /
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Chapter 1: Introduction -- Part I: Three Inclusive Exclusions -- Chapter 2: “A subtle, pervasive and strangely uncertain light”: Jaspers on understanding madness -- Chapter 3: “As strange to me as the birds in the garden”: Bleuler, Jung and the creation of schizophrenia -- Chapter 4: A distance from all that is human: Freud and Psychosis -- Part II: Through a glass darkly -- Chapter 5: Vital Contact -- Chapter 6: Ipseity -- Chapter 7: The Body -- Chapter 8: Being-in-the-world -- Part III: It’s a Mad world -- Chapter 9: “The world cannot acknowledge its own madness”: alienation and the destruction of experience -- Chapter 10: Reification and Schizophrenia – a socio-pathological parallelism -- Chapter 11: Beware, Marcuse! -- Chapter 12: “O my body. . .”: Fanon and the pathologies of recognition -- Part IV: “A certain madness must watch over thinking” -- Chapter 13: “In the distance of madness”: Foucault and the History of Madness -- Chapter 14: The lure of madness -- Chapter 15: Lacan: the shadow of madness -- Chapter 16: The ineffable and limit-experience -- Part V: Anti -Psychiatry and madness -- Chapter 17: Capitalism and schizophrenia -- Chapter 18: A germinal anti-psychiatry: R.D. Laing’s wild empathy -- Chapter 19: “It all began with a ‘no’”: The Institution negated -- Chapter 20: Epilogue – The end of madness?. .
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