Javascript must be enabled to continue!
‘Mind in general’ by Sir Alexander Crichton
View through CrossRef
The history of the ‘philosophies of psychiatry’ can be defined as the contextualized study of past theoretical views on the nature, understanding and management of madness and related notions. The application of an hermeneutic apparatus to past psychiatric narratives gives rise to the history of psychiatry; its application to current narrative gives origin to the philosophy of psychiatry. If the latter employs off-the-shelf, ready-made, external philosophies, it follows a centripetal approach; if it starts from the inside of psychiatry and generates its own tools and meta-language, it follows a centrifugal approach.Psychiatry is burdened by intrinsic and extrinsic philosophical problems. The former result from its hybrid nature, i.e., from the fact that psychiatry unsteadily straddles the natural and human sciences. The latter are borrowed from the conceptual frames into which psychiatry has been inscribed since the 19th century.The philosophy of psychiatry may anticipate or follow empirical research. The ante rem mode is based on the idea that empirical research requires conceptual supervision, audit and guidance, for it is always ideology-and theory-laden. The post rem mode is based on the view that science is the only way to ‘truth’ and hence all that the philosophy of psychiatry can (or should) do is facilitate, interpret, justify, defend or glorify empirical findings.The Classic Text that follows was written by Sir Alexander Crichton at the end of the 18th century, and is a good example of the centripetal mode of philosophy-making.
Title: ‘Mind in general’ by Sir Alexander Crichton
Description:
The history of the ‘philosophies of psychiatry’ can be defined as the contextualized study of past theoretical views on the nature, understanding and management of madness and related notions.
The application of an hermeneutic apparatus to past psychiatric narratives gives rise to the history of psychiatry; its application to current narrative gives origin to the philosophy of psychiatry.
If the latter employs off-the-shelf, ready-made, external philosophies, it follows a centripetal approach; if it starts from the inside of psychiatry and generates its own tools and meta-language, it follows a centrifugal approach.
Psychiatry is burdened by intrinsic and extrinsic philosophical problems.
The former result from its hybrid nature, i.
e.
, from the fact that psychiatry unsteadily straddles the natural and human sciences.
The latter are borrowed from the conceptual frames into which psychiatry has been inscribed since the 19th century.
The philosophy of psychiatry may anticipate or follow empirical research.
The ante rem mode is based on the idea that empirical research requires conceptual supervision, audit and guidance, for it is always ideology-and theory-laden.
The post rem mode is based on the view that science is the only way to ‘truth’ and hence all that the philosophy of psychiatry can (or should) do is facilitate, interpret, justify, defend or glorify empirical findings.
The Classic Text that follows was written by Sir Alexander Crichton at the end of the 18th century, and is a good example of the centripetal mode of philosophy-making.
Related Results
1240 The Asylum as a Research Institute: Sir James Crichton-Browne and the West Riding Pauper Lunatic Asylum
1240 The Asylum as a Research Institute: Sir James Crichton-Browne and the West Riding Pauper Lunatic Asylum
INTRODUCTION:
Societies throughout history have struggled with how to manage their mentally ill, particularly those individuals who are not of the monied class. Victori...
The wandering mind, the focussed mind and the meta-aware mind
The wandering mind, the focussed mind and the meta-aware mind
Caught within fast paced- urban industrial society, many of us may not ask questions about the nature of our mind, thoughts, although our mind, and thoughts often cause distress to...
Alexander the Great
Alexander the Great
Alexander the Great inspired a body of literature that grew throughout Antiquity and the Middle Ages by accumulating various episodes and local contributions across a host of langu...
Sir James Crichton Browne, 1840-1938
Sir James Crichton Browne, 1840-1938
On 31 January 1938, Sir James Crichton-Browne died a few months after his 97th birthday. In him the Royal Society lost its oldest Fellow, both in age and in membership, for he was ...
The Foundations of Cognitive Archaeology
The Foundations of Cognitive Archaeology
An empirically supported proposal for synthesizing multiple approaches to the study of the mind in the past.
In The Foundations of Cognitive Archaeology, Marc Abrami...
Kedudukan Wahyu dan Akal dalam Penghujahan berdasarkan Ilmu Mantik
Kedudukan Wahyu dan Akal dalam Penghujahan berdasarkan Ilmu Mantik
This article focuses on the discussion about the positions of the human mind and prophetic revelations in Islamic research. In the usual Social Science research, only the human min...
British Food Journal Volume 14 Issue 5 1912
British Food Journal Volume 14 Issue 5 1912
President, Charles S. Goldman, M.P.; Chairman, Charles Bathurst, M.P.; Vice‐Presidents: Christopher Addison, M.D., M.P., Waldorf Astor, M.P., Charles Bathurst, M.P., Hilaire Belloc...
Retroviral superinfection resistance
Retroviral superinfection resistance
AbstractThe retroviral phenomenon of superinfection resistance (SIR) defines an interference mechanism that is established after primary infection, preventing the infected cell fro...


