Philosophical issues in psychiatry. III, The nature and sources of historical change / edited by Kenneth S. Kendler, M.D., Rachel Brown Banks Distinguished Professor of Psychiatry, Professor of Human Genetics, Director, Virginia Institute for Psychiatric and Behavioral Genetics, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, Josef Parnas, M.D., Dr. Med., Clinical Professor, University of Copenhagen, Psychiatric Center Hvidovre & Danish National Research Foundation's Center for Subjectivity Research, Copenhagen, Denmark.

Psychiatry has long struggled with the nature of its diagnoses. The problems raised by questions about the nature of psychiatric illness are particularly fascinating because they sit at the intersection of philosophy, empirical psychiatric/psychological research, measurement theory, historical tradi...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Kendler, Kenneth S., 1950- (Editor), Parnas, Josef (Editor), Berrios, G. E. (Contributor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: New York, New York : Oxford University Press, 2015.
Edition:First edition.
Series:International perspectives in philosophy and psychiatry.
Subjects:
Online Access:Click for online access
Table of Contents:
  • Cover; Series; Philosophical Issues in Psychiatry III; Copyright; Table of Contents; List of Contributors; Introduction: applying the tools of the history and philosophy of science to psychiatry; Part I Nature of historical change in science; Section 1 Objectivity and scientific change; 1 Introduction to "Pluralism, incommensurability, and scientific change"; 2 Pluralism, incommensurability, and scientific change; 3 For objective, value-laden, contextualist pluralism; Section 2 Change in psychopathology; 4 Introduction to "History and epistemology of psychopathology."
  • 5 History and epistemology of psychopathology6 Can hybridity overcome dualism?; Section 3 Scientific disagreement in the medical context; 7 Introduction to "Expert disagreement and medical authority"; 8 Expert disagreement and medical authority; 9 Trust, dissent, and decision vectors; Section 4 The social, the cultural, and psychiatric kinds; 10 Introduction to "Varieties of social constructionism and the problem of progress in psychiatry"; 11 Varieties of social constructionism and the problem of progress in psychiatry.
  • 12 The role of cultural configurators in the formation of mental symptomsPart II History of broad movements/structures within psychiatry; Section 5 The psychiatric history of the diencephalon; 13 Introduction to "Biography of a brain structure: studying the diencephalon as an epistemic object"; 14 Biography of a brain structure: studying the diencephalon as an epistemic object; 15 Some reflections on historiographic strategies for the neurosciences; Section 6 The history of psychiatry as interdisciplinary history.
  • 16 Introduction to "On attitudes toward philosophy and psychology in German psychiatry, 1867-1917"17 On attitudes toward philosophy and psychology in German psychiatry, 1867-1917; 18 Interdisciplinarity versus compartmentalization: an eternal dilemma in psychiatry; Section 7 Psychiatry and psychoanalysis in the United States; 19 Introduction to "The development of psychoanalysis in the context of American psychiatry"; 20 The development of psychoanalysis in the context of American psychiatry; 21 Decline of psychoanalysis to the advantage of what?; Section 8 The operational revolution.
  • 22 Introduction to "Psychiatry made easy: operation(al)ism and some of its consequences"23 Psychiatry made easy: operation(al)ism and some of its consequences; 24 Hempel as a critic of Bridgman's operationalism: lessons for psychiatry from the history of science; Section 9 The evolution of genetic explanation in psychiatry; 25 Introduction to "The nature of nature"; 26 The nature of nature; 27 Is it time for a "Copenhagen interpretation" in behavioral genetics?; Section 10 Psychiatry and evolution; 28 Introduction to "What can evolution tell us about the healthy mind?"