Abstract

This article intends to reflect on the validation of psychiatric semiology and nosography that is taught in clinical psychologists and psychiatrists training programs. The vision of academic psychiatry of our times, strongly influenced by scientific narrative, seeks to consolidate an universal nosography that aims to erase the culture marks. However, the prevalence of certain diagnoses over others is determined by the social context and cultural changes that determine, in turn, the classifying standards of professionals. For this reason, it is important to include the contributions of public intellectuals and cultural theorists for an updated and culturalized semiology of clinical phenomena. We will use the developments of Mark Fisher on Capitalist Realism to rethink the main symptoms of depression.

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