Abstract

The author focuses attention or institutional psychotherapy and draws its clinical, philosophical and also ethical concepts in order to prove that an administrative logic of the mental institutions only leads to loose what characterise healing process. Three main axis are tackled: the concept of reaction, the concept of pathoplasty and the concept of alienation. The concept of reaction makes understandable how the atmosphere of an institution is exercising a so great influence on its patients' symptoms that a self-governing endogenic psychopathological process “that is turned away from its initial cause” is created. That results in the concept of pathoplasty, which refers to the fact that some aspects of the pathology are induced by the institution itself, from which result two main ideas of the institutional psychotherapy: a) an institution is to tie down to an auto analysis to heal its own pathological functioning; b) all the more so that an institution which doesn't could become iatrogenic. The concept of alienation is approached through the historical and philosophical aspects of the Marxist view. The author use Bataille's differentiation between restricted economy “which is in keeping with a capitalist one, susceptible of an accountable evaluation” - and general economy - which confus to negativity as a foundation for an inner social work, apart from any accountable evaluation to Hegel's mind for instance, desire is indissociable from the psychiatric heal.

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