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What is it to understand another person? A popular view in
philosophy of mind, cognitive science and various other disciplines
is that interpersonal understanding is a matter ofemploying a
'commonsense' or 'folk' psychology, consisting primarily of an
ability to attribute internal propositional attitudes on the basis
of behavioural observations. The emphasis of recent debates has
been on which mechanisms enable us to do this, how they arise
during development and how they might have evolved, rather than on
whether we actually do it at all. Ratcliffe disputes the shared
premise on which these debates rest. He argues that 'folk
psychology', as generally described, is a theoretically motivated,
simplistic and misleading abstraction from social life, which is
wrongly asserted to be 'commonsense' or 'what the folk think'.
Drawing on phenomenology, neuroscience and development psychology,
he offers an alternative account of interpersonal understanding.
This account emphasizes a distinctive kind of bodily relatedness
between people and the extent to which interpersonal interactions
are regulated by shared social environments.
This book proposes a series of interconnected arguments against the
view that interpersonal understanding involves the use of a 'folk'
or 'commonsense' psychology. Ratcliffe suggests that folk
psychology, construed as the attribution of internal mental states
in order to predict and explain behaviour, is a theoretically
motivated and misleading abstraction from social life. He draws on
phenomenology, neuroscience and developmental psychology to offer
an alternative account that emphasizes patterned interactions
between people in shared social situations.
This volume addresses the question of what it is like to be
depressed. Despite the vast amount of research that has been
conducted into the causes and treatment of depression, the
experience of depression remains poorly understood. Indeed, many
depression memoirs state that the experience is impossible for
others to understand. However, it is at least clear that changes in
emotion, mood, and bodily feeling are central to all forms of
depression, and these are the book s principal focus. In recent
years, there has been a great deal of valuable philosophical and
interdisciplinary research on the emotions, complemented by new
developments in philosophy of psychiatry and
scientifically-informed phenomenology. The book draws on all these
areas, in order to offer a range of novel insights into the nature
of depression experiences. To do so, it brings together a
distinguished group of philosophers, psychiatrists,
anthropologists, clinical psychologists and neuroscientists, all of
whom have made important contributions to current research on
emotion and/or psychiatric illness."
There is a great deal of current philosophical and scientific
interest in emotional feelings. However, many of the feelings that
people struggle to express in their everyday lives do not appear on
standard lists of emotions. For example, there are feelings of
unreality, heightened existence, surreality, familiarity,
unfamiliarity, estrangement, strangeness, isolation, emptiness,
belonging, being at home in the world, being at one with things,
significance, insignificance, and the list goes on. Such feelings
might be referred to as 'existential' because they comprise a
changeable sense of being part of a world. Existential feelings
have not been systematically explored until now, despite the
important role that they play in our lives and the devastating
effects that disturbances of existential feeling can have in
psychiatric illness.
Feelings of Being is the first ever philosophical account of the
nature, role and variety of existential feelings in psychiatric
illness and in everyday life. In this book, Matthew Ratcliffe
proposes that existential feelings form a distinctive group by
virtue of three characteristics: they are bodily feelings, they
constitute ways of relating to the world as a whole, and they are
responsible for our sense of reality. The book explains how
something can be a bodily feeling and, at the same time, a sense of
reality and belonging. It then explores the role of changed feeling
in psychiatric illness, showing how an account of existential
feeling can help us to understand experiential changes that occur
in a range of conditions, including depression, circumscribed
delusions, depersonalisation and schizophrenia. The book also
addresses the contribution madeby existential feelings to religious
experience and to philosophical thought.
Written in a clear, non-technical style throughout, it will be
valuable for philosophers, clinicians, students, and researchers
working in a wide range of disciplines.
A philosophical account of the structure of experience and how it
depends on interpersonal relations, developed through a study of
auditory verbal hallucinations and thought insertion. In Real
Hallucinations, Matthew Ratcliffe offers a philosophical
examination of the structure of human experience, its vulnerability
to disruption, and how it is shaped by relations with other people.
He focuses on the seemingly simple question of how we manage to
distinguish among our experiences of perceiving, remembering,
imagining, and thinking. To answer this question, he first develops
a detailed analysis of auditory verbal hallucinations (usually
defined as hearing a voice in the absence of a speaker) and thought
insertion (somehow experiencing one's own thoughts as someone
else's). He shows how thought insertion and many of those
experiences labeled as "hallucinations" consist of disturbances in
a person's senseof being in one type of intentional state rather
than another. Ratcliffe goes on to argue that such experiences
occur against a backdrop of less pronounced but wider-ranging
alterations in the structure of intentionality. In so doing, he
considers forms of experience associated with trauma,
schizophrenia, and profound grief. The overall position arrived at
is that experience has an essentially temporal structure, involving
patterns of anticipation and fulfillment that are specific to types
of intentional states and serve to distinguish them
phenomenologically. Disturbances of this structure can lead to
various kinds of anomalous experience. Importantly,
anticipation-fulfillment patterns are sustained, regulated, and
disrupted by interpersonal experience and interaction. It follows
that the integrity of human experience, including the most basic
sense of self, is inseparable from how we relate to other people
and to the social world as a whole.
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