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Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 1990

Pages: 102-117

ISBN (Hardback): 9780387973036

Full citation:

Joseph Rychlak, "Technical problems with teleological explanation in psychopathology", in: Philosophy and psychopathology, Berlin, Springer, 1990

Technical problems with teleological explanation in psychopathology

Sigmund Freud as a case in point

Joseph Rychlak

pp. 102-117

in: Manfred Spitzer, Brendan A. Maher (eds), Philosophy and psychopathology, Berlin, Springer, 1990

Abstract

It is generally recognized that modern personality theory dates from the closing decades of the nineteenth century when Sigmund Freud advanced his theories of psychopathology, which were then extended to normals. On first consideration, this seems an odd direction to take—moving from the abnormal to the normal behavioral pattern. But there is something irreducibly human albeit "unnatural" about a disordered mind. Neurotics do not listen to reason, yet they have their reasons. Psychotics believe in the most preposterous things, living out a phantasy realm that is stretched beyond recognition by those of us who populate the everyday, "natural" environment.

Cited authors

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 1990

Pages: 102-117

ISBN (Hardback): 9780387973036

Full citation:

Joseph Rychlak, "Technical problems with teleological explanation in psychopathology", in: Philosophy and psychopathology, Berlin, Springer, 1990