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Philosophy of Cognitive Science :: Issues in Cognitive Science :: Psychopathology

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Adshead, Gwen (1999). Psychopaths and other-regarding beliefs. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 6 (1):41-44.   (Cited by 4 | Google | More links | Edit)
Bach, Kent (1993). Emotional disorder and attention. In George Graham (ed.), Philosophical Psychopathology. Cambridge: MIT Press.   (Cited by 2 | Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: Some would say that philosophy can contribute more to the occurrence of mental disorder than to the study of it. Thinking too much does have its risks, but so do willful ignorance and selective inattention. Well, what can philosophy contribute? It is not equipped to enumerate the symptoms and varieties of disorder or to identify their diverse causes, much less offer cures (maybe it can do that-personal philosophical therapy is now available in the Netherlands). On the other hand, the scientific study of mental disorder has a long way to go. There is much disagreement and uncertainty about the nature, causes, and treatment of many specific disorders, as is evident from DSM's classification of them in predominantly symptomatic terms. And even if what is reflected in DSM were a consensus rather than a compromise, still this shifts periodically with each new edition. Moreover, it is a notorious fact that many patients who clearly have psychiatric abnormalities do not fit any of the recognized diagnostic categories.1
Bavidge, Michael (2006). Under the floorboards: Examining the foundations of mild cognitive impairment. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 13 (1):75-77.   (Cited by 2 | Google | More links | Edit)
Bayne, Timothy J. & Pacherie, Elisabeth (2004). Bottom-up or top-down: Campbell's rationalist account of monothematic delusions. Philosophy, Psychiatry and Psychology 11 (1):1-11.   (Cited by 21 | Google | More links | Edit)
Bayne, Timothy J. & Bacherie, Elisabeth (2004). Experience, belief, and the interpretive fold. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 11 (1):81-86.   (Cited by 6 | Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: Elisabeth Pacherie is a research fellow in philosophy at Institut Jean Nicod, Paris. Her main research and publications are in the areas of philosophy of mind, psychopathology and action theory. Her publications include a book on intentionality (_Naturaliser_ _l'intentionnalité_, Paris, PUF, 1993) and she is currently preparing a book on action and agency
Bayne, Timothy J. & Pacherie, Elisabeth (2005). In defence of the doxastic conception of delusions. Mind and Language 20 (2):163-88.   (Cited by 9 | Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: In this paper we defend the doxastic conception of delusions against the metacognitive account developed by Greg Currie and collaborators. According to the metacognitive model, delusions are imaginings that are misidentified by their subjects as beliefs: the Capgras patient, for instance, does not believe that his wife has been replaced by a robot, instead, he merely imagines that she has, and mistakes this imagining for a belief. We argue that the metacognitive account is untenable, and that the traditional conception of delusions as beliefs should be retained
Bentall, Richard P. (2003). Madness Explained. Allen Lane.   (Cited by 99 | Google | More links | Edit)
Bermudez, Jose Luis (2001). Normativity and rationality in delusional psychiatric disorders. Mind and Language 16 (5):457-493.   (Cited by 9 | Google | More links | Edit)
Berrios, G. (1991). Delusions as 'wrong beliefs': A conceptual history. British Journal of Psychiatry 159:6-13.   (Cited by 48 | Google | Edit)
Bickhard, Mark H. (ms). Psychopathology.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: In this paper I wish to address the question of the nature of psychopathology. It might naturally be felt that we already know a great deal about psychopathology, and thus that such a paper would be primarily a review and discussion of the literature; I will argue, however, that the most fundamental form of the question concerning the nature of psychopathology is rarely posed in the literature, that it is prevented from being posed by presuppositions inherent in standard theoretical approaches, and that, on those rare occasions when it does get addressed, it has received inadequate answers. Therefore, the paper will have more of the character of a conceptual explication and theoretical exegesis than it will of a review of the literature
Bolton, Derek (2001). Problems in the definition of 'mental disorder'. Philosophical Quarterly 51 (203):182-199.   (Cited by 3 | Google | More links | Edit)
Bond, John & Corner, Lynne (2006). Mild cognitive impairment: Where does it go from here? Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 13 (1):29-30.   (Google | Edit)
Bortolotti, Lisa (2005). Delusions and the background of rationality. Mind and Language 20 (2):189-208.   (Cited by 9 | Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: I argue that some cases of delusions show the inadequacy of those theories of interpretation that rely on a necessary rationality constraint on belief ascription. In particular I challenge the view that irrational beliefs can be ascribed only against a general background of rationality. Subjects affected by delusions seem to be genuine believers and their behaviour can be successfully explained in intentional terms, but they do not meet those criteria that according to Davidson (1985a) need to be met for the background of rationality to be in place
Bortolotti, Lisa (ms). Philosophy and mental illness.   (Google | Edit)
Abstract: Philosophers have been long interested in delusional beliefs and in whether, by reporting and endorsing such beliefs, deluded subjects violate norms of rationality (Campbell 1999; Davies & Coltheart 2002; Gerrans 2001; Stone & Young 1997; Broome 2004; Bortolotti 2005). So far they have focused on identifying the relation between intentionality and rationality in order to gain a better understanding of both ordinary and delusional beliefs. In this paper Matthew Broome and I aim at drawing attention to the extent to which deluded subjects are committed to the content of their delusional beliefs, that is, to whether they can be regarded as “authors” of their beliefs (Moran 2001). We consider several levels of commitment one can have to a reported belief, delusional or otherwise, and we distinguish between _ownership_ and _authorship_ of beliefs (Gallagher 2000). After examining some examples of belief authoring (or lack thereof) in psychopathology, we argue that there is no straight-forward and unitary answer to the question whether deluded subjects author their beliefs. Nevertheless, introducing the notion of authorship in the debate can significantly contribute to the philosophical literature on the rationality of delusions and can also have important implications for diagnosis and therapy in psychiatry
Brülde, Bengt & Radovic, Filip (2006). Dysfunctions, disabilities, and disordered minds. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 13 (2):133-141.   (Google | Edit)
Brülde, Bengt & Radovic, Filip (2006). What is mental about mental disorder? Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 13 (2):99-116.   (Cited by 2 | Google | More links | Edit)
Campbell, J. (2001). Rationality, meaning, and the analysis of delusion. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 8 (2-3):89-100.   (Cited by 21 | Google | More links | Edit)
Campbell, J. (1999). Schizophrenia, the space of reasons and thinking as a motor process. The Monist 82 (4):609-625.   (Cited by 42 | Google | Edit)
Canali, Stefano (2004). On the concept of the psychological. Topoi 23 (2):177-86.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract:   The idea that certain mental phenomena (e.g. emotions, depression, anxiety) can represent risk factors for certain somatic diseases runs through common thinking on the subject and through a large part of biomedical science. This idea still lies at the focus of the research tradition in psychosomatic medicine and in certain interdisciplinary approaches that followed it, such as psychoneuroimmunology. Nevertheless, the inclusion in the scientific literature of specifically mental phenomena in the list of risk factors pertaining to a specific pathological condition would seem, to say the least, problematic when not completely absent, unlike what happens for certain behavioural factors, such as smoking, sedentary life, and alcohol abuse. It is also significant that insurance companies and health and welfare services do not pay for interventions and treatment for states of anxiety, disorders of mood and of the personality, alexithymia and stress reduction, as means of prevention or treatment of somatic diseases, as instead they do for the treatment of tobacco addiction. However, as I shall endeavour to argue here, there are numerous and well grounded reasons why this different consideration of psychic conditions compared with behaviours is valid and must be maintained in the evaluation of pathogenetic risk factors
Chadwick, Ruth F. (1994). Kant, thought insertion, and mental unity. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 1 (2):105-113.   (Cited by 6 | Google | Edit)
Chung, M.; Fulford, K. William M. & Graham, George (2005). The Philosophical Understanding of Schizophrenia. Oxford University Press.   (Google | Edit)
Coltheart, Max (2005). Commentary: Conscious experience and delusional belief. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 12 (2):153-157.   (Google | Edit)
Coltheart, Max (2005). Conscious experience and delusional belief. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 12 (2):153-157.   (Cited by 3 | Google | More links | Edit)
Coltheart, Max & Davies, Martin (2000). Pathologies of Belief. Blackwell.   (Cited by 15 | Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: Blackwell, 2000 Review by George Graham, Ph.D on Oct 27th 2000 Volume: 4, Number: 43
Cruz, Joe (1997). Simulation and the psychology of sociopathy. Behavioral And Brain Sciences 20 (3).   (Google | More links | Edit)
Currie, Gregory & Jureidini, Jon (2001). Delusion, rationality, empathy. Philosophy, Psychiatry and Psychology 8 (2-3):159-62.   (Cited by 6 | Google | More links | Edit)
Damasio, Antonio R. (1998). Commentary on mind, body, and mental illness. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 5 (4):343-345.   (Cited by 2 | Google | More links | Edit)
Davidson, Larry (1994). Commentary on insight, delusion, and belief. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 1 (4):243-244.   (Google | Edit)
Davies, Martin; Davies, Anne Aimola & Coltheart, Max (2005). Anosognosia and the two-factor theory of delusions. Mind and Language 20 (2):241-57.   (Cited by 9 | Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: Anosognosia is literally ‘unawareness of or failure to acknowledge one’s hemi- plegia or other disability’ (OED). Etymology would suggest the meaning ‘lack of knowledge of disease’ so that anosognosia would include any denial of impairment, such as denial of blindness (Anton’s syndrome). But Babinski, who introduced the term in 1914, applied it only to patients with hemiplegia who fail to acknowledge their paralysis. Most commonly, this is failure to acknowledge paralysis of the left side of the body following damage to the right hemisphere of the brain. In this paper, we shall mainly be concerned with anosognosia for hemiplegia. But we shall also use the term ‘anosognosia’ in an inclusive way to encompass lack of knowledge or acknowledgement of any impairment. Indeed, in the construction ‘anosognosia for X’, X might even be anosognosia for some Y
Davies, Martin & Coltheart, Max (2000). Introduction: Pathologies of belief. Mind and Language 15 (1):1–46.   (Cited by 121 | Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: who are unrecognizable because they are in disguise. ¼ The person I see in the mirror is not really me. ¼ A person I knew who died is nevertheless in the hospital ward today. ¼ This arm [the speaker’s left arm] is not mine it is yours; you have..
Davies, Martin; Coltheart, Max; Langdon, Robyn & Breen, N. (2001). Monothematic delusions: Towards a two-factor account. Philosophy, Psychiatry and Psychology 8 (2-3):133-58.   (Cited by 33 | Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: We provide a battery of examples of delusions against which theoretical accounts can be tested. Then, we identify neuropsychological anomalies that could produce the unusual experiences that may lead, in turn, to the delusions in our battery. However, we argue against Maher’s view that delusions are false beliefs that arise as normal responses to anomalous experiences. We propose, instead, that a second factor is required to account for the transition from unusual experience to delusional belief. The second factor in the aetiology of delusions can be described superficially as a loss of the ability to reject a candidate for belief on the grounds of its implausibility and its inconsistency with everything else that the patient knows. But we point out some problems that confront any attempt to say more about the nature of this second factor
Davies, Martin & Coltheart, Max (2000). Pathologies of belief. Mind and Language 15:1-46.   (Cited by 7 | Google | Edit)
Abstract: 1923; Young, this volume); the Cotard delusion (Cotard, 1882; Berrios and Luque, 1995; Young, this volume); the Fregoli delusion (Courbon and Fail, 1927; de Pauw, Szulecka and Poltock, 1987; Ellis, Whitley and Luaute´, 1994); the delusion of mirrored-self misidentifi- cation (Foley and Breslau, 1982; Breen et al., this volume); a delusion of reduplicative param- nesia (Benson, Gardner and Meadows, 1976; Breen et al., this volume); a delusion sometimes found in patients suffering from unilateral neglect (Bisiach, 1988); and the delusions of alien control and of thought insertion, which are characteristic of schizophrenia (Frith, 1992)
Dreyfus, Hubert L. (1989). Alternative philosophical conceptualizations of psychopathology. In Phenomenology and Beyond: The Self and its Language. Dordrecht: Kluwer.   (Cited by 8 | Google | Edit)
Dreyfus, Hubert L. (online). Alternative philosophical conceptualizations of psychopathology.   (Cited by 8 | Google | Edit)
Abstract: Home Courses Selected Papers Selected Books C.V. Dreydegger.org Phil. Faculty Dept. Philosophy UC Berkeley
Egan, Andy (online). Imagination, delusion, and self-deception.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: Subjects with delusions profess to believe some extremely peculiar things. Patients with Capgras delusion sincerely assert that, for example, their spouses have been replaced by impostors. Patients with Cotard’s delusion sincerely assert that they are dead. Many philosophers and psychologists are hesitant to say that delusional subjects genuinely believe the contents of their delusions.2 One way to reinterpret delusional subjects is to say that we’ve misidentified the content of the problematic belief. So for example, rather than believing that his wife is has been replaced by an impostor, we might say that the victim of Capgras delusion believes that it is, in some respects, as if his wife has been replaced by an impostor. Another is to say that we’ve misidentified the attitude that the delusional subject bears to the content of their delusion. So for example, Gregory Currie and co-authors have suggested that rather than believing that his wife has been replaced by an impostor, we should say that the victim of Capgras delusion merely imagines that his wife has been replaced by an impostor.3
Elliott, Carl (2004). Mental illness and its limits. In The Philosophy of Psychiatry: A Companion. Oxford: Oxford University Press.   (Google | Edit)
Erwin, Edward (1999). Curing psychopathology: Can philosophy help? Philosophical Explorations 2 (3):189-205.   (Cited by 1 | Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: It is argued that philosophers can contribute indirectly to the cure of psychopathology by helping to resolve problems that impede the development of effective treatments. Two such problems are discussed. The first arises because different schools of therapy use conflicting criteria in evaluating therapeutic outcomes. A theory of Defective Desires is developed to deal with this problem. The second issue, which divides the field of psychotherapy, concerns the need for experiments, especially in validating claims of therapeutic efficacy. An epistemological foundation is developed to support the need for experiments
Flanagan, Elizabeth H. (2000). Essentialism and a folk-taxonomic approach to the classification of psychopathology. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 7 (3):183-189.   (Cited by 2 | Google | More links | Edit)
Flew, Antony G. N. (1981). Disease and mental disease. In Concepts Of Health And Disease. Reading: Addison-Wesley.   (Cited by 1 | Google | Edit)
Frith, Christopher D. & Gallagher, Shaun (2002). Models of the pathological mind. Journal of Consciousness Studies 9 (4):57-80.   (Cited by 36 | Google | Edit)
Fuchs, Thomas (2005). Overcoming dualism. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 12 (2):115-117.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Fulford, K. William M. (1995). Mind and madness: New directions in the philosophy of psychiatry. In A. Phillips Griffiths (ed.), Philosophy, Psychology, and Psychiatry. Cambridge University Press.   (Cited by 3 | Google | Edit)
Fulford, K. William M. (1994). Value, illness, and failure of action: Framework for a philosophical psychopathology of delusions. In George Graham & Lester D. Stephens (eds.), Philosophical Psychopathology. MIT Press.   (Cited by 7 | Google | Edit)
Gerrans, Philip (2002). A one-stage explanation of the cotard delusion. Philosophy, Psychiatry and Psychology 9 (1):47-53.   (Cited by 12 | Google | More links | Edit)
Gerrans, Philip (2001). Delusions as performance failures. Cognitive Neuropsychiatry 6 (3).   (Cited by 10 | Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract: Delusions are explanations of anomalous experiences. A theory of delusion requires an explanation of both the anomalous experience _and _the apparently irrational explanation generated by the delusional subject. Hence, we require a model of rational belief formation against which the belief formation of delusional subjects can be evaluated. _Method. _I first describe such a model, distinguishing procedural from pragmatic rationality. Procedural rationality is the use of rules or procedures, deductive or inductive, that produce an inferentially coherent set of propositions. Pragmatic rationality is the use of procedural rationality _in context_. I then apply the distinction to the explanation of the Capgras and the Cotard delusions. I then argue that delusions are failures of pragmatic rationality. I examine the nature of these failures employing the distinction between performance and competence familiar from Chomskian linguistics. _Results. _This approach to the irrationality of delusions reconciles accounts in which the explanation of the anomalous experience exhausts the explanation of delusion, accounts that appeal to further deficits within the reasoning processes of delusional subjects, and accounts that argue that delusions are not beliefs at all. (Respectively, one-stage, two-stage, and expressive accounts.) _Conclusion. _In paradigm cases that concern cognitive neuropsychiatry the irrationality of delusional subjects should be thought of as a performance deficit in pragmatic rationality
Gerrans, Philip (1999). Delusional misidentification as subpersonal disintegration. The Monist 82 (4):590-608.   (Cited by 9 | Google | Edit)
Gerrans, Philip (2003). Nativism and neuroconstructivism in the explanation of Williams syndrome. Biology and Philosophy 18 (1):41-52.   (Cited by 4 | Google | More links | Edit)
Abstract:   Nativists about syntactic processing have argued that linguisticprocessing, understood as the implementation of a rule-basedcomputational architecture, is spared in Williams syndrome, (WMS)subjects – and hence that it provides evidence for a geneticallyspecified language module. This argument is bolstered by treatingSpecific Language Impairments (SLI) and WMS as a developmental doubledissociation which identifies a syntax module. Neuroconstructivists haveargued that the cognitive deficits of a developmental disorder cannot beadequately distinguished using the standard gross behavioural tests ofneuropsychology and that the linguistic abilities of the WMS subject canbe equally well explained by a constructivist strategy of neurallearning in the individual, with linguisitic functions implemented in anassociationist architecture. The neuroconstructivist interpretation ofWMS undermines the hypothesis of a double dissociation between SLI andWMS, leaving unresolved the question of nativism about syntax. Theapparent linguistic virtuosity of WMS subjects is an artefact ofenhanced phonological processing, a fact which is easier to demonstratevia the associationist computational model embraced byneuroconstructivism
Gerrans, Philip (2000). Refining the explanation of cotard's delusion. Mind and Language 15 (1):111-122.   (Cited by 21 | Google | More links | Edit)
Gert, Bernard & Culver, Charles M. (2004). Defining mental disorder. In The Philosophy of Psychiatry: A Companion. Oxford: Oxford University Press.   (Google | Edit)
Ghaemi, S. Nassir (1999). An empirical approach to understanding delusions. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 6 (1):21-24.   (Google | More links | Edit)
Gibbs, Paul J. (2000). Thought insertion and the inseparability thesis. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 7 (3):195-202.   (Cited by 2 | Google | More links | Edit)
Gibbs, Paul J. (2000). The limits of subjectivity: A response to the commentary. Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 7 (3):207-208.   (Google | More links | Edit)