Abstract

Phenomenological psychopathology is a body of scientific knowledge on which the clinical practice of psychiatry is based since the first decades of the twentieth century, a method to assess the patient's abnormal experiences from their own perspective, and more importantly, a science responsible for delimiting the object of psychiatry. Recently, the frontiers of phenomenological psychopathology have expanded to the productive development of therapeutic strategies that target the whole of existence in their actions. In this article, we present an overview of the current state of this discipline, summing up some of its key concepts, and highlighting its importance to clinical psychiatry today. Phenomenological psychopathology understands mental disorders as modifications of the main dimensions of the life-world: lived time, lived space, lived body, intersubjectivity, and selfhood. Psychopathological symptoms are the expression of a dialectical modification of the proportions of certain domains of the life-world or of the lived experience. The far-reaching relevance of the concepts of proportion and dialectics for the clinical agenda is explored. The article presents two contemporary models for clinical practice based on phenomenological psychopathology: Dialectical-proportional oriented approach and Person-centered dialectic approach (P.H.D. method). The main characteristics of these approaches are considered, as well as the new perspectives they bring to the challenges of psychiatric care in the twentieth-first century.

Highlights

  • The association between phenomenology and psychopathology was first postulated by Karl Jaspers, in his seminal work, “General Psychopathology” (1913/1997)

  • We present an overview of the current state of this discipline, summing up some of its key concepts, and highlighting its importance to clinical psychiatry today

  • Phenomenological psychopathology assesses the life-worlds of mental disorders

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The association between phenomenology and psychopathology was first postulated by Karl Jaspers, in his seminal work, “General Psychopathology” (1913/1997). Since “General Psychopathology,” psychopathology has been understood as a body of scientific knowledge on which the clinical practice of psychiatry is based, a method to assess the patient’s abnormal experiences from their own perspective, and more importantly, a science responsible for delimiting the object of psychiatry. Phenomenological psychopathology assesses the life-worlds of mental disorders. To the common-sense world we all more or less share, there are several frameworks of experience, as for example, fantasy worlds, dream worlds, and psychopathological worlds. In the latter, psychopathological symptoms are the expression of a modification of the framework within which they are generated. The experience of time, space, body, Self, and others are the basic dimensions of the life-world within which each single symptom is situated [2, 3]

Lived Time
Lived Body
MODELS FOR CLINICAL PRACTICE BASED ON PHENOMENOLOGICAL PSYCHOPATHOLOGY
CONCLUSIONS
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
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