Exploring the Self
Philosophical and psychopathological perspectives on self-experience
Editor
| University of Copenhagen
The aim of this volume is to discuss recent research into self-experience and its disorders,and to contribute to a better integration of the different empirical and conceptual perspectives. Among the topics discussed are questions like What is a self?, What is the relation between the self-givenness of consciousness and the givenness of the conscious self?,How should we understand the self-disorders encountered in schizophrenia? and What general insights into the nature of the self can pathological phenomena provide us with? Most of the contributions are characterized by a distinct phenomenological approach.
The chapters by Butterworth, Strawson, Zahavi, and Marbach are general in nature and address different psychological and philosophical aspects of what it means to be a self. Next Eilan, Parnas, and Sass turn to schizophrenia and ask both how we should approach and understand this disorder, and, more specifically,what we can learn about the nature of selfhood and existence from psychopathology. The chapters by Blakemore and Gallagher present a defense and a criticism of the so-called model of self-monitoring, respectively. The final three chapters by Cutting, Stanghellini, Schwartz and Wiggins represent anthropologically oriented attempts to situate pathologies of self-experience.
(Series B)
The chapters by Butterworth, Strawson, Zahavi, and Marbach are general in nature and address different psychological and philosophical aspects of what it means to be a self. Next Eilan, Parnas, and Sass turn to schizophrenia and ask both how we should approach and understand this disorder, and, more specifically,what we can learn about the nature of selfhood and existence from psychopathology. The chapters by Blakemore and Gallagher present a defense and a criticism of the so-called model of self-monitoring, respectively. The final three chapters by Cutting, Stanghellini, Schwartz and Wiggins represent anthropologically oriented attempts to situate pathologies of self-experience.
(Series B)
[Advances in Consciousness Research, 23] 2000. viii, 301 pp.
Publishing status: Available
© John Benjamins Publishing Company
Table of Contents
Preface
|
vii
|
1
|
|
PART I
|
|
19
|
|
39
|
|
55
|
|
75
|
|
PART II
|
|
97
|
|
115
|
|
149
|
|
PART III
|
|
185
|
|
203
|
|
PART IV
|
|
243
|
|
257
|
|
279
|
|
Index
|
295
|
“[...] warmly recommended for those with an interest in the intersection between philosophy and psychopathology.”
Timothy J. Bayne, Department of Philosophy/Religious Studies, University of Canterbury, New Zealand
Cited by
Cited by 13 other publications
Barry, Elizabeth
Chojnacka, Marta Agata
Freeman, Lauren
Friedrich, O. & L. Tambornino
Lymer, Jane
Nelson, Barnaby & Andrea Raballo
Sanz, Ricardo, Julita Bermejo-Alonso, Claudio Rossi, Miguel Hernando, Koro Irusta & Esther Aguado
Thornton, Tim
Wilson-d’Almeida, K., A. Karrow, M.-C. Bralet, N. Bazin, M.-C. Hardy-Baylé & B. Falissard
Zahavi, Dan
This list is based on CrossRef data as of 07 february 2021. Please note that it may not be complete. Sources presented here have been supplied by the respective publishers. Any errors therein should be reported to them.
Subjects
Consciousness Research
Philosophy
Psychology
BIC Subject: JM – Psychology
BISAC Subject: PSY000000 – PSYCHOLOGY / General