
doi: 10.17454/pam-1803
handle: 20.500.11768/132539 , 11573/1660578 , 20.500.13089/j0de
The phenomenological method, characterized by the suspension of judgment (epoché), has helped analyzing the subjective experience of patients affected by mental disorders. Psychiatry, dealing with the human being itself in its complexity and unicity, is placed between the biological positivistic attempt, for which the symptoms of mental illness are a mere consequence of brain dysfunctions and the phenomenological-existential approach, inclined to consider the symptoms as meaningful phenomena of the person's subjective experience. Eugène Minkowski, Ludwig Binswanger, Arthur Tatossian, Kimura Bin, Henri Maldiney and Hubertus Tellenbach are fundamental authors in the phenomenological psychopathology of depression; they described the alterations of the lived time, space, body and others experienced by the depressed. Starting from the main theoretical contributions of the authors, we will focus on the psychopathology and discuss the key themes of clinical depression: guilt, poverty and hypochondriasis. Finally we will focus on the typus melancholicus construct
Psychopathology, Depression, melancholy, psychopathology, depression, phenomenology, phenomenology; psychopathology; depression; melancholy, Melancholy, Phenomenology
Psychopathology, Depression, melancholy, psychopathology, depression, phenomenology, phenomenology; psychopathology; depression; melancholy, Melancholy, Phenomenology
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