- Deepening and Expanding Both–And Approaches
- Social Psychiatry Inside-OUT
- Toward a Fictionalist Psychiatry?
- Externalist Psychiatry, Mindshaping, and Embodied Injustice
- Psychiatric Practice and the Living Force of the Social in the Biopsychosocial
- Better to Have No Deep Cut Anywhere in the Biopsychosocial System
- Grounding Psychiatry in the Body and the Social World
- Outline for an Externalist Psychiatry (3): Social Etiology and the Tension Between Constraints and the Possibilities of Construction
- Outline for an Externalist Psychiatry (2): An Anthropological Detour
- Outline for an Externalist Psychiatry (1): Or, How to Fully Realize the Biopsychosocial Model
- Models of Psychopathology and Religion: Suffering, Psychosis, and Neurodiversity
- Deconstructing the Distinction Between Religious Experience and Psychopathology
- Metanoia
- Psychopathology AND Religious Experience? Toward a Both–And View
- From Methodological Naturalism to Interpretive Exclusivism About Religious Psychopathology
- Hermeneutical Injustice and Best Practice
- Religion, Psychiatry, and “Radical” Epistemic Injustices
- Hermeneutical Injustice in the Attribution of Psychotic Symptoms with Religious Content
- What Can (and Cannot) Be Said About the Distinction Between Religious Experience and Psychopathology
- Mental Disorder and Religious Experience: The Need for a Humble, Pragmatic Pluralism
- Two Different “Religious Experience vs Psychopathology” Distinctions
- Introduction to the Special Theme Religious Experience and Psychopathology
- Is Expertise-by-Experience Impossible?
- Are Mental Health “Peer Support Workers” Experts by Experience?
- Why Democratize Psychiatric Research?
- Scientific Expertise, Service Users and Democratising Psychiatric Research
- An Interesting Framework That Deserves to Be Developed and Used Widely
- Democratizing Psychiatric Research: Recognizing the Potential and the Limits of Experiential Expertise
- How is a Therapist like a Modeler?
- “It starts on TikTok”: Looping Effects and The Impact of Social Media on Psychiatric Terms
- The Meaning(s) of Humiliation According to the Empirical Evidence
- Editorial changes at PPP: Welcomes and Thanks
- Tribute to an Altruistic Editor
- Experience and expertise: Could a Person’s Experience of Mental Illness Be the Basis of Professional Expertise?
- Subjective Experiences of Tourette Syndrome: Beyond the Premonitory Urge
- Phenomenological Interviews and Tourette’s
- Institution or Individuality? Some Reflections on the Lessons To Be Learned From Personal Accounts of Recovery From Schizophrenia
- Recovering One’s Self from Psychosis: A Philosophical Analysis
- How Narrative Counts in Phenomenological Models of Schizophrenia
- The Social, the Outer and the Reflexive: Some More Dimensions of Subjectivity, Schizophrenia, and Its Recovery
- Does Addiction Cause Addictive Behavior?
- Philosophy’s Role in Theorizing Psychopathology
- Philosophy’s Role in Psychopathology Back to Jaspers and an Appeal to Grow Practical
- Postmodern Assumptions of Philosophy of Psychiatry
- Understanding, The Manifest Image, and ‘Postmodernism’ in Philosophy of Psychiatry
- Dimensions, Not Types: On the Phenomenology of Premonitory Urges in Tourette Syndrome
- Priming and Narrative Habits in the Phenomenological Interview: Reflections on a Study of Tourette Syndrome
- Making up Monsters, Redirecting Blame: An Examination of Excited Delirium
- Experience, Institutions, and Epistemology
- Rules and Community
- The Dilemma of Compliance: Roles and Rules in Schizophrenia, Censorship, and Life
- Excited Delirium: Falsifiability, Causality, and the Importance of Advocacy
- Excited Delirium: The Self-Fulfilling Prophecy of Police Brutality
- Excited Delirium: What’s Psychiatry Got to do With It?
- Lack, Perversion, Shame
- On the Importance of Conceptual Contrasts: Madness, Reason, and Mad Pride
- The Contrast Class for Madness and Mental Disorder
- How to Reason Beyond Reason? Toward a Philosophical Understanding of Madness
- What, Exactly, Does the Madperson Lack?
- Madness, Reason, and Pride
- “Though This Be Madness, Yet There Is Method in ’T”: A Positive Account of Madness
- Conceptual Geography or A Hermeneutic Journey into Mental Health-Related Linguistic Practice
- Madness and Idiocy: Reframing a Basic Problem of Philosophy of Psychiatry
- Understanding First: Exploring Its Scope and Testing Its Limits
- The Limits of Self-Constitution
- Could Understanding Harm?
- Existential Psychodrama: A Way to Incorporate Otherness and Open Up to Existence: A Clinical Approach of Psychosis
- Notes on Psychodramatic Treatment of a Person with Schizophrenia
- Psychodramatic Psychotherapy for Schizophrenic Individuals
- Philosophers, Carers, and Psychodramatic Games
- How to Measure Depression: Looking Back on the Making of Psychiatric Assessment
- Diagnostic Criteria, Psychological Tests, and Ratings Scales: Extending the History
- “What Is Actually Being Measured?”: Causality and Underlying Scientific Thinking Process in the Assessment of Depression
- Close Enemies: The Relationship of Psychiatry and Psychology in the Assessment of Mental Disorders
- Psychiatric Diagnosis as Recognition in Disorder Identified Individuals
- Diagnostic Wannabes
- Understanding First: A Psychoanalytic Take on Self-Constitution
- Epistemic Style in OCD
- Four Ways of Going “Right” Functions in Mental Disorder
- A Critique of Critical Psychiatry
- Critical Psychiatry in the Context of Critical Medicine
- Making a New World: Chapman on What We’re Doing and Who is Included in the Project
- Critical Psychiatry, Mental Health, and Collective Liberation
- Is OCD Epistemically Irrational?
- Rationality, Irrationality, and Depathologizing OCD
- The Rational and the Sane
- Narcissism as a Moral Incompetence
- Narcissism A Focal Point for Examining the Interrelatedness of Psychology and Philosophy
- Narcissism, Empathy and Moral Responsibility
- Why Narcissists Are Morally Responsible
- Introduction to the 30th Anniversary Issue of Philosophy, Psychiatry, & Psychology
- What Is Psychiatry About?
- From Clinical Encounter to Knowledge Claims: Epistemological Guidelines for Case Studies in Psychotherapy
- The Remnants of Sense
- Vulnerabilization and De-pathologization: Two Philosophical Suggestions
- The ‘Power Threat Meaning Framework’: Yet Another Master Narrative?
- Power, Threat, Meaning Framework: A Philosophical Critique
- Arguing about Psychiatry: Natural Selection, Austinian Conservatism, and Finding Our Way to the Best
- Minding Psychiatric Practice
- Past, Present—and Future Perfect? Taking Psychiatry Beyond Its Single Message Mythologies
- What Makes a Disorder ‘Mental’? A Practical Treatment of Psychiatric Disorder
- Hermeneutics, Neuroscience and Psychiatry
- Compelling Reasons
- The Debate about Assisted Dying for Persons with Mental Disorders: An Essential Role for Philosophy
- Narrative Formulation Revisited: On Seeing the Person in Mental Health Recovery
- The Future Is Political and Transdisciplinary
- Memory and the Instituting Social Imaginary
- Decolonizing Memory
- Recognizing Wounds and Giving Uptake The Undoing of Dominant Collective Memories
- Exclusion of the Psychopathologized and Hermeneutical Ignorance Threaten Objectivity
- Can The Psychopathologized Speak? Notes on Social Objectivity and Psychiatric Science
- On the Limits of Diversity
- Standards and Assumptions, the Limits of Inclusion, and Pluralism in Psychiatry
- Socrates’ Maieutics and the Ethical Foundations of Psychotherapy
- From the Patient’s Perspective: Engaging With the Other
- Revisiting Greek Psychiatry
- Understanding and Healing
- Memory, Colonialism, and Psychiatry How Collective Memories Underwrite Madness
- Recovering Duty
- Immanuel Kant and the Task of Understanding Another’s Lived-Experience
- Distressed But Not Helpless
- Semantic Vagueness in Psychiatric Nosology
- It’s in the Attitude
- Psychiatric Disorders Are Soft Natural Kinds
- Examining Assumptions about Vagueness
- Material Encounters: A Phenomenological Account of Social Interaction in Autism
- Mediated Encounters in Autistic Spectrum Disorder: From the Material to the Digital
- Matters of the Autistic Mind: What Is the Role of Material Objects in Social Interaction?
- On the Actuality and Virtuality of Autistic Encounters: Respecting the Autistic Voice and Reimagining the Social
- Bipolar Disorder and Self-Determination: Predicating Self-Determination at Scope
- Symptoms of Trauma, Kantian Natural Powers, and the Duty to Seek Treatment
- It’s Been Utility All Along: An Alternate Understanding of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and The Depressive Realism Hypothesis
- The Epistemic Relevance of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
- Proof of Efficacy Is No Proof of Validity in Psychotherapy
- Why Theoretical Adequacy (Not Just Therapeutic Efficacy) Matters
- Epistemic Humility: Accruing Wisdom or Forsaking Standards?
- “More Things in Heaven and Earth”: The Worldly Situated Human Person Perspective
- Exploring Epistemic Humility and its Limits in Therapeutics
- Being and Pain
- Epistemic Humility, Wisdom, and Cognitive Neuroscience
- The Virtue of Epistemic Humility
- Making Medical Science More Scientific: Embracing Uncertainty and Complexity
- Epistemic Humility, Justice, and Honesty in Clinical Care
- Datafied Brains and Digital Twins: Lessons From Industry, Caution For Psychiatry
- Assessing the Dangers of the Next Reductionist Fantasy
- ‘Limited but useful’: Datafied Brains and Digital Twins
- Accountability as a Key Virtue in Mental Health and Human Flourishing
- Accountability, Autonomy, and Motivation
- Accountability and the Cultivation of Virtue in Treatment
- Accountability and Autonomy
- Ordinary Language and Life-World Philosophies: Toward the Next Generation in Philosophy and Psychiatry
- Isolated by Oneself: Ontologically Impossible Experiences in Schizophrenia
- Phenomenology, Schizophrenia, and the Varieties of Understanding
- Doubt, Delusion and Diagnosis
- Retreating Realities and Invading Insights
- A Universal Definition of Mental Disorder: Neither Necessary nor Desirable
- Function, Dysfunction, and the Concept of Mental Disorder
- Dysfunction and the Definition of Mental Disorder in the DSM
- Psychological Injury is Not New and Not Normal
- Louis Charland: 1958–2021
- Can One and the Same Instance of Grief Be Both Normal and Disordered?
- On the Concept of “Psychiatric Disorder”: Incorporating Psychological Injury
- Recognition and Identity: Abstract Concepts, Concrete Struggles
- The Limits of Community for A Theory of Recognition
- Values Constitute the Boundaries in Between the Rules of Nature and Social Recognition
- An Approach to the Boundary Problem: Mental Health Activism and the Limits of Recognition
- Introducing the New PPP Editorial Team
- Who Owns the Concept of Psychiatric Disorder?
- On the Gravity of Mental Illness Stigma
- Defending Social Objectivity for “Mental Disorder”
- Osborne P. Wiggins, Jr., PhD, 1943–2021
- Two Enactive Approaches to Psychiatry: Two Contrasting Views on What it Means to Be Human
- Comparing Two Enactive Perspectives
- Psychosis and Intelligibility
- The Order of Disorder
- Methodology or Muse?
- Some Aspects of Containment Matter
- Culture, Context, and Community in Contemporary Psychedelic Research
- Containment Matters: Set and Setting in Contemporary Psychedelic Psychiatry
- Schizophrenia, the Uncanny, and the Fragility of Ordinary Life
- The Phenomenology of Psychosis: Considerations for the Future
- Schizophrenia as a Problem of Other Minds
- Theories of Psychosis versus: What It Is Like
- Asking the Right Questions on Psychosis and Intelligibility
- Striving to Make Sense: The Duty of Respect for Persons with Psychosis
- A Measure of Philosophical Distance
- Comparing Two Enactive Perspectives on Mental Disorder
- Forced Feeding for Anorexia: Soft or Hard Paternalism?
- From Habits to Compulsions: Losing Control?
- The Guilt-Free Psychopath
- Cleckley’s Psychopaths
- Psychopathy and Lack of Guilt
- Fresh Thinking
- Validity of Data as Precondition for Evidence: A Methodological Analysis of What is Taken to Count as Evidence in Psychotherapy Research
- Evidence for Doubting the Evidence?
- Why it is Important to Look Closely at What Happens When Therapy Clients Complete Symptom Measures
- Evidence for the Non-Evidenced: An Argument for Integrated Methods and Conceptual Discussion on What Needs to be Evidenced in Psychotherapy Research
- Food Refusal, Anorexia and Soft Paternalism: What’s at Stake?
- Anorexia Nervosa, Lack of “Coherence” with Deeply Held Beliefs and Values, and Involuntary Treatment
- Why Even a Liberal Can Justify Limited Paternalistic Intervention in Anorexia Nervosa
- Curing Psychiatry’s Schizophrenia: A Commentary in Values-Based PHD Mental Health Practice
- From the Dialectics of Recognition to Common Humanity
- Schizophrenia as a Transformative Evaluative Concept: Perspectives on the Psychiatric Significance of the Personal Self in the Ethics of Recognition
- The Human Need for Recognition
- Madness, Moral Agency, and Recovery
- The Schizophrenic Person as a Moral Agent
- Controlling the Noise: A Phenomenological Account of Anorexia Nervosa and the Threatening Body
- Anorexia: That Body I Am-With
- Anorexia Nervosa, the Visceral Body, and the Sense of Ownership
- (Un)wanted Feelings in Anorexia Nervosa: Making the Visceral Body Mine Again
- Key Concept: Loneliness
- I Am Schizophrenic, Believe It or Not! A Dialogue about the Importance of Recognition
- From Diagnosis to Therapeutic Empathy: A Journey into Recognition
- Self-Management in Psychiatry and Psychomatic Medicine—Part 2
- Self-Management in Psychiatry as Reducing Self-Illness Ambiguity
- The Need for Relational Authenticity Strategies in Psychiatry
- Dealing with Self-Illness Ambiguity: A Rebuttal
- What Kind of “Management” Is Self-Management? A Two-Dimensional Approach to Self-Management in Mental Health Care
- Managing the Self: Some Philosophical Issues
- Causation in Self-Management
- The Clinical Stance and the Nurturing Stance: Therapeutic Responses to Harmful Conduct by Service Users in Mental Healthcare
- Blame, Reproach, and Responsibility
- Reproach without Blameworthiness
- Narratives of Undiagnosability: Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Life-Writing and the Indeterminacy of Illness Memoirs
- The Status of Documents: Medical Files and Literary Genres-The Case of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
- Narratives of Illness and the Function of Diagnoses
- Self-Management as Socially Embedded Endeavor
- The Haunting and Mourning of Subaltern Voices in Psychiatry
- Not in our Brains: On the Complex Relationship Between Biology and Behavior
- The False Binary Between Biology and Behavior
- Specific Phobia Is an Ideal Psychiatric Kind
- Buried in Silence: Homosexuality and the Feighner Criteria
- Hermeneutic Haunting: The Interpretation of Violence and the Violence of Interpretation
- Toward a Postcolonial Psychiatry: Uncovering the Structures of Domination in Mental Health Theory and Practice
- Heidegger on Melancholia, Deep Boredom, and the Inability-to-Be
- Postcolonialism and (Anti)psychiatry: On Hearing Voices and Ghostwriting
- The Phenomenology of Craving, and the Explanatory Overreach of Neuroscience
- The Disunity of Addictive Cravings
- Neuroessentialism and the Rhetoric of Neuroscience
- Addictive Craving: There’s More to Wanting More
- Heidegger and the Radical Temporalities of Fundamental Attunements
- Reflections on Phenomenological Method in Depression
- Psychiatric Euthanasia, Mental Capacity, and a Sense of the Possible
- Melancholia, Temporal Disruption, and the Torment of Being both Unable to Live and Unable to Die
- “It Was the Brain Tumor That Done It!”: Szasz and Wittgenstein on the Importance of Distinguishing Disease from Behavior and Implications for the Nature of Mental Disorder
- Time and the Tic Disorder Triad
- The Relationalist Turn in Understanding Mental Disorders: From Essentialism to Embracing Dynamic and Complex Relations
- Psychopathology Beyond Psychiatric Symptomatology
- The Ontological Background of The Relationalist Turn in Understanding Mental Disorders
- Narrative Understanding, Value, and Diagnosis: A Particularist Account of Clinical Formulations and Shared Decision-making in Mental Health
- Enactivism as a New Framework for Psychiatry
- An Enactive Approach to Psychiatry
- Enactivism, Causality, and Therapy
- De Haan on Sense-Making and Psychopathology
- Enactive Causality: Interventions, Cakes, and Clockworks A Reply to Gallagher and Donovan and Murphy
- An Enactive Approach to Anxiety and Anxiety Disorders
- Embodied Self-Referentiality
- Cognitive Embodiment and Anxiety Disorders
- On Stories Within and Stories Behind Symptoms: Response to Colombetti and Stein
- Delusion, Reality, and Intersubjectivity A Phenomenological and Enactive Analysis
- Delusion, Reality, and Excentricity Comment on Thomas Fuchs
- Description Is Not Enough: The Real Challenge of Enactivism for Psychiatry
- On Excentricity and Explanation Reply To Sass’s and Walter’s Comments
- Disturbance of Ego-Boundary Enaction in Schizophrenia
- Why Schizophrenia Is so Relevant to Enaction and to Clinical Ethics: Naturalizing the Transcendental and the Risk of Stigmatizing
- When Ego-Boundaries Break
- Anorexia Nervosa: A Case for Exceptionalism in Ethical Decision Making
- Disclosure of Mental Health: Philosophical and Psychological Perspectives
- Epistemic Injustice and Self-Injury: A Concept with Clinical Implications
- Into the Open: On Henri Maldiney’s Philosophy of Psychosis
- Understanding Self-Injury through Body Shame and Internalized Oppression
- Changing The Definition of The Kilogram: Insights For Psychiatric Disease Classification
- The Search for Meaning in Neuropsychiatry
- Benefits and Challenges of the Phenomenological Approach to the Psychiatrist’s Subjective Experience: Impassivity, Neutrality, and Embodied Awareness in the Clinical Encounter
- The Interface of Ethics and Psychiatry: A Philosophical Case Consultation on Psychiatric Ethics on the Ground
- What Does It Mean to Have a Meaning Problem? Meaning, Skill, and the Mechanisms of Change in Psychotherapy
- Hearing Soundless Voices
- Putting Minds Together: Commentary on the Interface of Ethics and Psychiatry
- Psychiatry Beyond the Brain: Externalism, Mental Health, and Autistic Spectrum Disorder
- Teaching, Learning, and “Doing”: Ethics for the Clinic and the Future of Psychiatry
- The Importance of Learning Ethics for and from Psychiatrists: A Teacher–Trainee Reflection
- Crucial to Optimal Learning and Practice of Ethics: Virtuous Relationships and Diligent Processes that Account for Both Shared and Conflicting Values
- Principle and Practice in Psychiatric Ethics Consultation: An Opening for Interdisciplinary Dialogue
- Why Psychiatric Ethics and Social Science Should Be Friends
- Aims, Methods, and Resources for Ethics Training
- Psychiatry’s Problem with Reductionism
- An Anthropological Perspective on Autism
- Expanding Outcome Measures in Schizophrenia Research: Does the Research Domain Criteria Pose a Threat?
- Generic Language and the Stigma of Mental Illness
- Delusion, Folk Psychology, and the Scientific Image
- Pharmacological Treatment of Schizophrenia in Light of Phenomenology
- Knocking on Hard Science’s Door: Has the Time Come?
- Some Remarks for an Agenda Regarding Phenomenologically Oriented Pharmacological Treatment of Schizophrenia
- A Step Beyond Psychopathology: A New Frontier of Phenomenology in Psychiatry
- The Centrality of Narratives in the Mental Health Clinic, Care and Research
- A Defense for the Acquitted?
- Shared Modes of Narrative, on the Limits of Expressing One’s Unique Experience
- Between Perspectives: Narratives, Lived Experience, and Culture
- The Subject of Psychopathology: Of What Plural Is It Made?
- What Is the Subject in Question?
- Neurosciences, Syntax and Language: The Subject’s Challenge
- What Is It Like to Be a Subject?
- Double Bookkeeping and Doxasticism About Delusion
- Folk and Philosophical Epistemologies: A Double Bookkeeping of Sorts by Delusion’s Theoreticians?
- Believing in Doxasticism
- Nurture Before Responsibility: Self-in-Relation Competence and Self-Harm
- When the Body Stands in the Way: Complex Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, Depersonalization, and Schizophrenia
- Psychiatry as Normative Practice
- Diagnostic Reasoning in Psychiatry: Acknowledging an Explicit Role for Intersubjective Knowing
- Phenomenology and Dimensional Approaches to Psychiatric Research and Classification
- Challenges to the Dimensional Approach
- Clarifying a Dimensional Approach to Phenomenological Psychopathology
- The Ontological Status of a Psychiatric Diagnosis: The Case of Neurasthenia
- Ought-onomy and Mental Health Ethics: From “Respect for Personal Autonomy” to “Preservation of Person-in-Community” in African Ethics
- Melancholy as Disease: Learning about Depression as Disease from Burton’s Anatomy of Melancholy
- Contextualism as a Solution to Paternalism in Psychiatric Practice
- Psychological Disadvantage and a Welfarist Approach to Psychiatry
- Is Depression A Sin? A Philosophical Examination Of Christian Voluntarism
- Meeting Christian Voluntarism on its Own Terms
- Depression and Christian Voluntarism Examining Freedom from The Perspective of Psychological Science
- Why Philosophy?
- Let The Drugs Lead The Way! On the Unfolding of a Research Program in Psychiatry
- Explaining Depression
- Why Construing Theories of Depression as Lakatos’ Research Programs Might Spell Trouble for their Proponents
- Explaining Biological Depression Theories
- The Importance of Self-Narration in Recovery from Addiction
- Pathologies of Thought and First-Person Authority
- Possibilities of Misidentification
- Privileged Access and the Agent in the Thought-Insertion
- Mirror Synesthesia and the Limits of Misidentification
- Technical Delusions in Schizophrenia: A Philosophical Interpretation
- Auditory Verbal Hallucination and the Sense of Ownership
- Why Does the Diagnosis of Schizophrenia Persist?
- Personality Disorders and Thick Concepts
- Dialectical Virtue and the Philosophy of Psychoanalysis
- Understanding Projective Identification
- Projective Identification, Clinical Context, and Philosophical Elucidation
- You Can Get Here from There
- The Science of Psychoanalysis
- Psychoanalysis: Science of the Mind?
- Evidence, Inference and Causal Explanation in Psychoanalysis
- Madness, Badness and Immaturity: Some Conceptual Issues in Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy
- Moral Experience and the Unconscious
- Psychoanalysis, the Good Life, and Human Development
- Searching for a Sign: Listening, Looking, Touching, Way-Finding
- ‘Early Stage’ Instrumental Irrationality: Lessons from Apathy
- In Memoriam: Eric Matthews
- Assessing Decision-Making Capacity After Brain Injury: A Phenomenological Approach
- Executive Dysfunction as a Barrier to Authenticity in Decision Making
- Acquired Brain Injury, Mental Illness, and the Subtleties of Competence Assessment
- Authenticity, Insight, and Impaired Decision-Making Capacity in Acquired Brain Injury
- A Consideration of both Means and Ends: Values-Based Medicine and the Problem of Changing Values
- Self-Knowledge in Psychotherapy: Adopting a Dual Perspective on One’s Own Mental States
- Prozac or Prosaic Diaries?: The Gendering of Psychiatric Disability in Depression Memoirs
- Are We Prosaic Deep Inside?: Depression Memoirs, Resourceful Narratives, and the Biomedical Model of Depression
- Depression Memoirs in the Circuits of Culture: Sexism, Sanism, Neoliberalism, and Narrative Identity
- Situating Depression Memoirs’ Effects Deeper Inside our Biology and Further Outward Within Circuits of Culture: Exploring the Roles of Antidepressants and Pharmaceutical Marketing
- Accounting for Intuition in Decision-Making Capacity: Rethinking the Reasoning Standard?
- Intuition, Self-Reflection, and Individual Choice: Considerations for Proposed Changes to Criteria for Decisional Capacity
- Obstacles in the Assessment of Intuitive Decision-Making Capacity
- Shedding Light on Implicit Processes and the Inherent Vagueness of Decision-Making Capacity
- Akratic Believing, Psychological Trauma, and Somatic Representations
- Three Questions about Somatic Representations: A Response to Freedman’s “Akratic Believing”
- Trauma and Belief
- Akratic Feelings
- Liberal Individualism and Deleuzean Relationality in Intellectual Disability
- The Subject of Intellectual Disability: A Reply to Clegg, Murphy, & Almack
- Intellectual Disability, Choice, and Relational Ethics
- Becoming Able to See Anomalies
- The Meaning and Relevance of Minkowski’s ‘Loss of Vital Contact with Reality’
- The Intersubjective Dimension of Schizophrenia
- Mental Disorder as a Practical Psychiatric Kind
- Even Ethics Professors Fail to Return Library Books
- A Case of Major Depression: Some Philosophical Problems in Everyday Clinical Practice
- Valid Ethics Versus Probable Histories
- Ontological Assumptions, a Biopsychosocial Approach, and Patient Participation: Moving Toward an Ethically Legitimate Science of Psychiatric Nosology
- Browne’s External DSM Ethical Review Panel: That Dog Won’t Hunt
- Philosophy’s Territorialism: Scientists Can Talk About Values Too
- An Ethics Review Panel for the DSM: A Worthwhile Challenge
- Changing Internal Representations of Self and Other: Philosophical Tools for Attachment-informed Psychotherapy With Perpetrators and Victims of Violence
- Augustine, Divine Agency, and Therapeutic Change
- Thomistic Thoughts on Changing Representations of Self and Other
- Metaphysical Resources for the Treatment of Violence: The Self–Action Distinction
- Folk Psychology Wins the DAY! Daubert and the Challenge of False Confessions
- A Role for Philosophers, Sociologists and Bioethicists in Revising the DSM: A Philosophical Case Conference
- Ethics Experts, Pedagogical Responsibilities, and Wishful Thinking: Revising the DSM
- A Modest Proposal
- Self-management as management of self – contributions from psychosomatic medicine and psychotherapy
- Schizophrenia and intersubjectivity: An embodied and enactive approach to psychopathology and psychotherapy
- Dimensions of the self in emotion and psychopathology: Consequences for self-management in anxiety and depression
- Re-Authoring narrative therapy: Improving our selfmanagement tools
- Metacognition, selfexperience and the prospect of enhancing selfmanagement in schizophrenia spectrum disorders
- Self-management as management of the self: Future directions for healthcare and the promotion of mental health
- Management of the self: An interdisciplinary approach to self-management in psychiatry and psychosomatic medicine