The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry
Herausgeber: Fulford, Kwm; Thornton, Tim; Stanghellini, Giovanni; Sadler, John; Graham, George; Gipps, Richard; Davies, Martin
The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry
Herausgeber: Fulford, Kwm; Thornton, Tim; Stanghellini, Giovanni; Sadler, John; Graham, George; Gipps, Richard; Davies, Martin
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Philosophy has much to offer psychiatry, not least regarding ethical issues, but also issues regarding the mind, identity, values, and volition. The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry offers the most comprehensive reference resource for this area every published - one that is essential for both students and researchers in this field.
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Philosophy has much to offer psychiatry, not least regarding ethical issues, but also issues regarding the mind, identity, values, and volition. The Oxford Handbook of Philosophy and Psychiatry offers the most comprehensive reference resource for this area every published - one that is essential for both students and researchers in this field.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Oxford Handbooks
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 1344
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. Mai 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 248mm x 174mm x 52mm
- Gewicht: 2044g
- ISBN-13: 9780198744252
- ISBN-10: 0198744250
- Artikelnr.: 47870793
- Oxford Handbooks
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 1344
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. Mai 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 248mm x 174mm x 52mm
- Gewicht: 2044g
- ISBN-13: 9780198744252
- ISBN-10: 0198744250
- Artikelnr.: 47870793
KWM Fulford, St Cross College, Oxford, UK, Martin Davies, Corpus Christi College, Oxford, UK, Richard Gipps, University Counselling Service, University of Oxford, UK, George Graham, Department of Philosophy, Georgia State University, USA, John Sadler, Division of Ethics, Department of Psychiatry, UT Southwestern, USA, Giovanni Stanghellini, Universita G. d'Annunzio' Chieti, Italy, Tim Thornton, School of Health, University of Central Lancashire, UK
* 1: The Next Hundred Years: Watching our Ps and Q
* Section One: History
* 2: Introduction
* 3: Daniel Robinson: The insanity defense as a history of mental
disorder
* 4: Terence Irwin: Mental health as moral virtue: some ancient
arguments
* 5: Edward Harcourt: Aristotle, Plato and the Anti-Psychiatrists:
Comment on Irwin
* 6: Katherine Arens: Wilhelm Griesinger: Philosophy as origin of a new
psychiatry
* 7: Christoph Mundt: The Philosophical Roots of Karl Jaspers' General
Psychopathology
* 8: Federico Leoni: From Madness to Mental Illness: Psychiatry and
Biopolitics in Michel Foucault
* 9: 1. Jennifer Radden and Somogy Varga: The epistemological value of
depression memoirs: a meta-analysis
* Section Two: Contexts of Care
* 10: Introduction
* 11: Pat Bracken and Philip Thomas: Challenges to the Modernist
Identity of Psychiatry: User Empowerment and Recovery
* 12: Marilyn Nissim-Sabat: Race and gender in philosophy of
psychiatry: science, relativism and phenomenology
* 13: Louis C. Charland: Why Psychiatry Should Fear Medicalization
* 14: James Phillips: Technology And Psychiatry
* 15: Larry Davidson: Cure and Recovery
* Section Three: Establishing Relationships
* 16: Introduction
* 17: Thor Grünbaum and Dan Zahavi: Varieties of Self-Awareness
* 18: Daniel D. Hutto: Interpersonal Relating
* 19: Shaun Gallagher: Intersubjectivity and psychopathology
* 20: Anita Avramides: Other Minds, Autism, and Depth in Human
Interaction
* 21: Nancy Nyquist Potter: Empathic foundations of clinical knowledge
* 22: Grant Gillett and Rom Harré: Discourse and diseases of the psyche
* 23: Giovanni Stanghellini: Philosophical Resources for the
Psychiatric Interview
* Section Four: Summoning Concepts
* 24: Introduction
* 25: Elselijn Kingma: Naturalistic Accounts of Mental Disorder
* 26: KWM Fulford and CW van Staden: Values-based practice: topsy-turvy
take home messages from ordinary language philosophy (and a few next
steps)
* 27: Kelso Cratsley and Richard Samuels: Cognitive Science and
Explanations of Psychopathology
* 28: Derek Bolton: What is Mental Illness?
* 29: John Z. Sadler: Vice and Mental Disorders
* 30: Lisa Bortolotti: Rationality and Sanity: The role of rationality
judgements in understanding psychiatric disorders
* 31: Jennifer Church: Boundary Problems: Negotiating the Challenges of
Responsibility and Loss
* 32: George Graham: Ordering Disorder: Mental disorder, brain
disorder, and therapeutic Intervention
* 33: Eric Matthews: Mental Disorder: Can Merleau-Ponty take us beyond
the "Mind-Brain" problem?
* Section Five: Descriptive Psychopathology
* 34: Introduction
* 35: Gerrit Glas: Anxiety and phobias: Phenomenologies, concepts,
explanations
* 36: Matthew Ratcliffe: Depression and the phenomenology of free will
* 37: Katherine J. Morris: Body image disorders
* 38: Thomas Fuchs: The phenomenology of affectivity
* 39: Louis Sass and Elizabeth Pienkos: Delusion: The phenomenological
approach
* 40: Johannes Roessler: Thought insertion, self-awareness, and
rationality
* 41: Tim Bayne: The disunity of consciousness in psychiatric disorders
* 42: Martin Davies and Andy Egan: Delusion: Cognitive approaches -
Bayesian inference and compartmentalization
* Section Six: Assessment and Diagnostic Categories
* 43: Introduction
* 44: Jeffrey Poland and Barbara Von Eckardt: Mapping the Domain of
Mental Illness
* 45: John Z. Sadler: Values in psychiatric diagnosis and
classification
* 46: Matthew Broome, Paolo Fusar-Poli, and Philippe Wuyts: Conceptual
and ethical issues in the Prodromal Phase of Psychosis
* 47: S. Nassir Ghaemi: Understanding Mania and Depression
* 48: R. Peter Hobson: Autism and the Philosophy of Mind
* 49: Julian C. Hughes: Dementia is dead, long live ageing: Philosophy
and practice in connection with "dementia"
* 50: Walter Sinnott-Armstrong and Hanna Pickard: What is Addiction?
* 51: Owen Flanagan: Identity and Addiction: What alcoholic memoirs
teach
* 52: Peter Zachar and Robert F. Krueger: Personality Disorder and
Validity: A History of Controversy
* 53: Stephen R.L. Clark: Personal Identity and Identity Disorders
* Section Seven: Explanation and Understanding
* 54: Introduction
* 55: John Campbell: Causation and Mechanisms in Psychiatry
* 56: Rachel Cooper: Natural Kinds
* 57: Dominic Murphy: The Medical Model and the Philosophy of Science
* 58: Nick Haslam: Reliability, Validity, and the Mixed Blessings of
Operationalism
* 59: Kenneth F. Schaffner: Reduction and Reductionism in Psychiatry
* 60: Michael A. Bishop and J.D. Trout: Diagnostic Prediction and
Prognosis: Getting from Symptom to Treatment
* 61: Tim Thornton: Clinical judgment, tacit knowledge and recognition
in psychiatric diagnosis
* 62: Nicholas Shea: Neural Mechanisms of Decision Making and the
Personal Level
* 63: Giovanna Colombetti: Psychopathology and the Enactive Mind
* 64: Michael Lacewing: Could psychoanalysis be a science?
* Section Eight: Cure and Care
* 65: Introduction
* 66: Hanna Pickard: Responsibility without Blame: Philosophical
Reflections on Clinical Practice
* 67: Lubomira Radoilska: Depression, Decisional Capacity, and Personal
Autonomy
* 68: Fredrik Svenaeus: Psychopharmacology and the Self
* 69: Bennett Foddy, Guy Kahane, and Julian Savulescu: Practical
neuropsychiatric Ethics
* 70: David A. Jopling: Placebo Effects in Psychiatry and Psychotherapy
* 71: Richard Askay and Jensen Farquhar: Being Unconscious: Heidegger
and Freud
* 72: Richard Gipps: Assumptions behind CBT: a philosophical appraisal
* 73: Jim Hopkins: Understanding and Healing: Psychiatry and
Psychoanalysis in the Era of Neuroscience
* Section One: History
* 2: Introduction
* 3: Daniel Robinson: The insanity defense as a history of mental
disorder
* 4: Terence Irwin: Mental health as moral virtue: some ancient
arguments
* 5: Edward Harcourt: Aristotle, Plato and the Anti-Psychiatrists:
Comment on Irwin
* 6: Katherine Arens: Wilhelm Griesinger: Philosophy as origin of a new
psychiatry
* 7: Christoph Mundt: The Philosophical Roots of Karl Jaspers' General
Psychopathology
* 8: Federico Leoni: From Madness to Mental Illness: Psychiatry and
Biopolitics in Michel Foucault
* 9: 1. Jennifer Radden and Somogy Varga: The epistemological value of
depression memoirs: a meta-analysis
* Section Two: Contexts of Care
* 10: Introduction
* 11: Pat Bracken and Philip Thomas: Challenges to the Modernist
Identity of Psychiatry: User Empowerment and Recovery
* 12: Marilyn Nissim-Sabat: Race and gender in philosophy of
psychiatry: science, relativism and phenomenology
* 13: Louis C. Charland: Why Psychiatry Should Fear Medicalization
* 14: James Phillips: Technology And Psychiatry
* 15: Larry Davidson: Cure and Recovery
* Section Three: Establishing Relationships
* 16: Introduction
* 17: Thor Grünbaum and Dan Zahavi: Varieties of Self-Awareness
* 18: Daniel D. Hutto: Interpersonal Relating
* 19: Shaun Gallagher: Intersubjectivity and psychopathology
* 20: Anita Avramides: Other Minds, Autism, and Depth in Human
Interaction
* 21: Nancy Nyquist Potter: Empathic foundations of clinical knowledge
* 22: Grant Gillett and Rom Harré: Discourse and diseases of the psyche
* 23: Giovanni Stanghellini: Philosophical Resources for the
Psychiatric Interview
* Section Four: Summoning Concepts
* 24: Introduction
* 25: Elselijn Kingma: Naturalistic Accounts of Mental Disorder
* 26: KWM Fulford and CW van Staden: Values-based practice: topsy-turvy
take home messages from ordinary language philosophy (and a few next
steps)
* 27: Kelso Cratsley and Richard Samuels: Cognitive Science and
Explanations of Psychopathology
* 28: Derek Bolton: What is Mental Illness?
* 29: John Z. Sadler: Vice and Mental Disorders
* 30: Lisa Bortolotti: Rationality and Sanity: The role of rationality
judgements in understanding psychiatric disorders
* 31: Jennifer Church: Boundary Problems: Negotiating the Challenges of
Responsibility and Loss
* 32: George Graham: Ordering Disorder: Mental disorder, brain
disorder, and therapeutic Intervention
* 33: Eric Matthews: Mental Disorder: Can Merleau-Ponty take us beyond
the "Mind-Brain" problem?
* Section Five: Descriptive Psychopathology
* 34: Introduction
* 35: Gerrit Glas: Anxiety and phobias: Phenomenologies, concepts,
explanations
* 36: Matthew Ratcliffe: Depression and the phenomenology of free will
* 37: Katherine J. Morris: Body image disorders
* 38: Thomas Fuchs: The phenomenology of affectivity
* 39: Louis Sass and Elizabeth Pienkos: Delusion: The phenomenological
approach
* 40: Johannes Roessler: Thought insertion, self-awareness, and
rationality
* 41: Tim Bayne: The disunity of consciousness in psychiatric disorders
* 42: Martin Davies and Andy Egan: Delusion: Cognitive approaches -
Bayesian inference and compartmentalization
* Section Six: Assessment and Diagnostic Categories
* 43: Introduction
* 44: Jeffrey Poland and Barbara Von Eckardt: Mapping the Domain of
Mental Illness
* 45: John Z. Sadler: Values in psychiatric diagnosis and
classification
* 46: Matthew Broome, Paolo Fusar-Poli, and Philippe Wuyts: Conceptual
and ethical issues in the Prodromal Phase of Psychosis
* 47: S. Nassir Ghaemi: Understanding Mania and Depression
* 48: R. Peter Hobson: Autism and the Philosophy of Mind
* 49: Julian C. Hughes: Dementia is dead, long live ageing: Philosophy
and practice in connection with "dementia"
* 50: Walter Sinnott-Armstrong and Hanna Pickard: What is Addiction?
* 51: Owen Flanagan: Identity and Addiction: What alcoholic memoirs
teach
* 52: Peter Zachar and Robert F. Krueger: Personality Disorder and
Validity: A History of Controversy
* 53: Stephen R.L. Clark: Personal Identity and Identity Disorders
* Section Seven: Explanation and Understanding
* 54: Introduction
* 55: John Campbell: Causation and Mechanisms in Psychiatry
* 56: Rachel Cooper: Natural Kinds
* 57: Dominic Murphy: The Medical Model and the Philosophy of Science
* 58: Nick Haslam: Reliability, Validity, and the Mixed Blessings of
Operationalism
* 59: Kenneth F. Schaffner: Reduction and Reductionism in Psychiatry
* 60: Michael A. Bishop and J.D. Trout: Diagnostic Prediction and
Prognosis: Getting from Symptom to Treatment
* 61: Tim Thornton: Clinical judgment, tacit knowledge and recognition
in psychiatric diagnosis
* 62: Nicholas Shea: Neural Mechanisms of Decision Making and the
Personal Level
* 63: Giovanna Colombetti: Psychopathology and the Enactive Mind
* 64: Michael Lacewing: Could psychoanalysis be a science?
* Section Eight: Cure and Care
* 65: Introduction
* 66: Hanna Pickard: Responsibility without Blame: Philosophical
Reflections on Clinical Practice
* 67: Lubomira Radoilska: Depression, Decisional Capacity, and Personal
Autonomy
* 68: Fredrik Svenaeus: Psychopharmacology and the Self
* 69: Bennett Foddy, Guy Kahane, and Julian Savulescu: Practical
neuropsychiatric Ethics
* 70: David A. Jopling: Placebo Effects in Psychiatry and Psychotherapy
* 71: Richard Askay and Jensen Farquhar: Being Unconscious: Heidegger
and Freud
* 72: Richard Gipps: Assumptions behind CBT: a philosophical appraisal
* 73: Jim Hopkins: Understanding and Healing: Psychiatry and
Psychoanalysis in the Era of Neuroscience
* 1: The Next Hundred Years: Watching our Ps and Q
* Section One: History
* 2: Introduction
* 3: Daniel Robinson: The insanity defense as a history of mental
disorder
* 4: Terence Irwin: Mental health as moral virtue: some ancient
arguments
* 5: Edward Harcourt: Aristotle, Plato and the Anti-Psychiatrists:
Comment on Irwin
* 6: Katherine Arens: Wilhelm Griesinger: Philosophy as origin of a new
psychiatry
* 7: Christoph Mundt: The Philosophical Roots of Karl Jaspers' General
Psychopathology
* 8: Federico Leoni: From Madness to Mental Illness: Psychiatry and
Biopolitics in Michel Foucault
* 9: 1. Jennifer Radden and Somogy Varga: The epistemological value of
depression memoirs: a meta-analysis
* Section Two: Contexts of Care
* 10: Introduction
* 11: Pat Bracken and Philip Thomas: Challenges to the Modernist
Identity of Psychiatry: User Empowerment and Recovery
* 12: Marilyn Nissim-Sabat: Race and gender in philosophy of
psychiatry: science, relativism and phenomenology
* 13: Louis C. Charland: Why Psychiatry Should Fear Medicalization
* 14: James Phillips: Technology And Psychiatry
* 15: Larry Davidson: Cure and Recovery
* Section Three: Establishing Relationships
* 16: Introduction
* 17: Thor Grünbaum and Dan Zahavi: Varieties of Self-Awareness
* 18: Daniel D. Hutto: Interpersonal Relating
* 19: Shaun Gallagher: Intersubjectivity and psychopathology
* 20: Anita Avramides: Other Minds, Autism, and Depth in Human
Interaction
* 21: Nancy Nyquist Potter: Empathic foundations of clinical knowledge
* 22: Grant Gillett and Rom Harré: Discourse and diseases of the psyche
* 23: Giovanni Stanghellini: Philosophical Resources for the
Psychiatric Interview
* Section Four: Summoning Concepts
* 24: Introduction
* 25: Elselijn Kingma: Naturalistic Accounts of Mental Disorder
* 26: KWM Fulford and CW van Staden: Values-based practice: topsy-turvy
take home messages from ordinary language philosophy (and a few next
steps)
* 27: Kelso Cratsley and Richard Samuels: Cognitive Science and
Explanations of Psychopathology
* 28: Derek Bolton: What is Mental Illness?
* 29: John Z. Sadler: Vice and Mental Disorders
* 30: Lisa Bortolotti: Rationality and Sanity: The role of rationality
judgements in understanding psychiatric disorders
* 31: Jennifer Church: Boundary Problems: Negotiating the Challenges of
Responsibility and Loss
* 32: George Graham: Ordering Disorder: Mental disorder, brain
disorder, and therapeutic Intervention
* 33: Eric Matthews: Mental Disorder: Can Merleau-Ponty take us beyond
the "Mind-Brain" problem?
* Section Five: Descriptive Psychopathology
* 34: Introduction
* 35: Gerrit Glas: Anxiety and phobias: Phenomenologies, concepts,
explanations
* 36: Matthew Ratcliffe: Depression and the phenomenology of free will
* 37: Katherine J. Morris: Body image disorders
* 38: Thomas Fuchs: The phenomenology of affectivity
* 39: Louis Sass and Elizabeth Pienkos: Delusion: The phenomenological
approach
* 40: Johannes Roessler: Thought insertion, self-awareness, and
rationality
* 41: Tim Bayne: The disunity of consciousness in psychiatric disorders
* 42: Martin Davies and Andy Egan: Delusion: Cognitive approaches -
Bayesian inference and compartmentalization
* Section Six: Assessment and Diagnostic Categories
* 43: Introduction
* 44: Jeffrey Poland and Barbara Von Eckardt: Mapping the Domain of
Mental Illness
* 45: John Z. Sadler: Values in psychiatric diagnosis and
classification
* 46: Matthew Broome, Paolo Fusar-Poli, and Philippe Wuyts: Conceptual
and ethical issues in the Prodromal Phase of Psychosis
* 47: S. Nassir Ghaemi: Understanding Mania and Depression
* 48: R. Peter Hobson: Autism and the Philosophy of Mind
* 49: Julian C. Hughes: Dementia is dead, long live ageing: Philosophy
and practice in connection with "dementia"
* 50: Walter Sinnott-Armstrong and Hanna Pickard: What is Addiction?
* 51: Owen Flanagan: Identity and Addiction: What alcoholic memoirs
teach
* 52: Peter Zachar and Robert F. Krueger: Personality Disorder and
Validity: A History of Controversy
* 53: Stephen R.L. Clark: Personal Identity and Identity Disorders
* Section Seven: Explanation and Understanding
* 54: Introduction
* 55: John Campbell: Causation and Mechanisms in Psychiatry
* 56: Rachel Cooper: Natural Kinds
* 57: Dominic Murphy: The Medical Model and the Philosophy of Science
* 58: Nick Haslam: Reliability, Validity, and the Mixed Blessings of
Operationalism
* 59: Kenneth F. Schaffner: Reduction and Reductionism in Psychiatry
* 60: Michael A. Bishop and J.D. Trout: Diagnostic Prediction and
Prognosis: Getting from Symptom to Treatment
* 61: Tim Thornton: Clinical judgment, tacit knowledge and recognition
in psychiatric diagnosis
* 62: Nicholas Shea: Neural Mechanisms of Decision Making and the
Personal Level
* 63: Giovanna Colombetti: Psychopathology and the Enactive Mind
* 64: Michael Lacewing: Could psychoanalysis be a science?
* Section Eight: Cure and Care
* 65: Introduction
* 66: Hanna Pickard: Responsibility without Blame: Philosophical
Reflections on Clinical Practice
* 67: Lubomira Radoilska: Depression, Decisional Capacity, and Personal
Autonomy
* 68: Fredrik Svenaeus: Psychopharmacology and the Self
* 69: Bennett Foddy, Guy Kahane, and Julian Savulescu: Practical
neuropsychiatric Ethics
* 70: David A. Jopling: Placebo Effects in Psychiatry and Psychotherapy
* 71: Richard Askay and Jensen Farquhar: Being Unconscious: Heidegger
and Freud
* 72: Richard Gipps: Assumptions behind CBT: a philosophical appraisal
* 73: Jim Hopkins: Understanding and Healing: Psychiatry and
Psychoanalysis in the Era of Neuroscience
* Section One: History
* 2: Introduction
* 3: Daniel Robinson: The insanity defense as a history of mental
disorder
* 4: Terence Irwin: Mental health as moral virtue: some ancient
arguments
* 5: Edward Harcourt: Aristotle, Plato and the Anti-Psychiatrists:
Comment on Irwin
* 6: Katherine Arens: Wilhelm Griesinger: Philosophy as origin of a new
psychiatry
* 7: Christoph Mundt: The Philosophical Roots of Karl Jaspers' General
Psychopathology
* 8: Federico Leoni: From Madness to Mental Illness: Psychiatry and
Biopolitics in Michel Foucault
* 9: 1. Jennifer Radden and Somogy Varga: The epistemological value of
depression memoirs: a meta-analysis
* Section Two: Contexts of Care
* 10: Introduction
* 11: Pat Bracken and Philip Thomas: Challenges to the Modernist
Identity of Psychiatry: User Empowerment and Recovery
* 12: Marilyn Nissim-Sabat: Race and gender in philosophy of
psychiatry: science, relativism and phenomenology
* 13: Louis C. Charland: Why Psychiatry Should Fear Medicalization
* 14: James Phillips: Technology And Psychiatry
* 15: Larry Davidson: Cure and Recovery
* Section Three: Establishing Relationships
* 16: Introduction
* 17: Thor Grünbaum and Dan Zahavi: Varieties of Self-Awareness
* 18: Daniel D. Hutto: Interpersonal Relating
* 19: Shaun Gallagher: Intersubjectivity and psychopathology
* 20: Anita Avramides: Other Minds, Autism, and Depth in Human
Interaction
* 21: Nancy Nyquist Potter: Empathic foundations of clinical knowledge
* 22: Grant Gillett and Rom Harré: Discourse and diseases of the psyche
* 23: Giovanni Stanghellini: Philosophical Resources for the
Psychiatric Interview
* Section Four: Summoning Concepts
* 24: Introduction
* 25: Elselijn Kingma: Naturalistic Accounts of Mental Disorder
* 26: KWM Fulford and CW van Staden: Values-based practice: topsy-turvy
take home messages from ordinary language philosophy (and a few next
steps)
* 27: Kelso Cratsley and Richard Samuels: Cognitive Science and
Explanations of Psychopathology
* 28: Derek Bolton: What is Mental Illness?
* 29: John Z. Sadler: Vice and Mental Disorders
* 30: Lisa Bortolotti: Rationality and Sanity: The role of rationality
judgements in understanding psychiatric disorders
* 31: Jennifer Church: Boundary Problems: Negotiating the Challenges of
Responsibility and Loss
* 32: George Graham: Ordering Disorder: Mental disorder, brain
disorder, and therapeutic Intervention
* 33: Eric Matthews: Mental Disorder: Can Merleau-Ponty take us beyond
the "Mind-Brain" problem?
* Section Five: Descriptive Psychopathology
* 34: Introduction
* 35: Gerrit Glas: Anxiety and phobias: Phenomenologies, concepts,
explanations
* 36: Matthew Ratcliffe: Depression and the phenomenology of free will
* 37: Katherine J. Morris: Body image disorders
* 38: Thomas Fuchs: The phenomenology of affectivity
* 39: Louis Sass and Elizabeth Pienkos: Delusion: The phenomenological
approach
* 40: Johannes Roessler: Thought insertion, self-awareness, and
rationality
* 41: Tim Bayne: The disunity of consciousness in psychiatric disorders
* 42: Martin Davies and Andy Egan: Delusion: Cognitive approaches -
Bayesian inference and compartmentalization
* Section Six: Assessment and Diagnostic Categories
* 43: Introduction
* 44: Jeffrey Poland and Barbara Von Eckardt: Mapping the Domain of
Mental Illness
* 45: John Z. Sadler: Values in psychiatric diagnosis and
classification
* 46: Matthew Broome, Paolo Fusar-Poli, and Philippe Wuyts: Conceptual
and ethical issues in the Prodromal Phase of Psychosis
* 47: S. Nassir Ghaemi: Understanding Mania and Depression
* 48: R. Peter Hobson: Autism and the Philosophy of Mind
* 49: Julian C. Hughes: Dementia is dead, long live ageing: Philosophy
and practice in connection with "dementia"
* 50: Walter Sinnott-Armstrong and Hanna Pickard: What is Addiction?
* 51: Owen Flanagan: Identity and Addiction: What alcoholic memoirs
teach
* 52: Peter Zachar and Robert F. Krueger: Personality Disorder and
Validity: A History of Controversy
* 53: Stephen R.L. Clark: Personal Identity and Identity Disorders
* Section Seven: Explanation and Understanding
* 54: Introduction
* 55: John Campbell: Causation and Mechanisms in Psychiatry
* 56: Rachel Cooper: Natural Kinds
* 57: Dominic Murphy: The Medical Model and the Philosophy of Science
* 58: Nick Haslam: Reliability, Validity, and the Mixed Blessings of
Operationalism
* 59: Kenneth F. Schaffner: Reduction and Reductionism in Psychiatry
* 60: Michael A. Bishop and J.D. Trout: Diagnostic Prediction and
Prognosis: Getting from Symptom to Treatment
* 61: Tim Thornton: Clinical judgment, tacit knowledge and recognition
in psychiatric diagnosis
* 62: Nicholas Shea: Neural Mechanisms of Decision Making and the
Personal Level
* 63: Giovanna Colombetti: Psychopathology and the Enactive Mind
* 64: Michael Lacewing: Could psychoanalysis be a science?
* Section Eight: Cure and Care
* 65: Introduction
* 66: Hanna Pickard: Responsibility without Blame: Philosophical
Reflections on Clinical Practice
* 67: Lubomira Radoilska: Depression, Decisional Capacity, and Personal
Autonomy
* 68: Fredrik Svenaeus: Psychopharmacology and the Self
* 69: Bennett Foddy, Guy Kahane, and Julian Savulescu: Practical
neuropsychiatric Ethics
* 70: David A. Jopling: Placebo Effects in Psychiatry and Psychotherapy
* 71: Richard Askay and Jensen Farquhar: Being Unconscious: Heidegger
and Freud
* 72: Richard Gipps: Assumptions behind CBT: a philosophical appraisal
* 73: Jim Hopkins: Understanding and Healing: Psychiatry and
Psychoanalysis in the Era of Neuroscience