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The Monist
Volume 82, Issue 4, October 1999
Cognitive Theories of Mental Illness
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Displaying: 1-9 of 9 documents
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1.
The Monist:
Volume
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82
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Issue: 4
Brendan A. Maher
Anomalous Experience in Everyday Life: Its Significance for Psychopathology
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2.
The Monist:
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A.W. Young
Delusions
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Although a common clinical phenomenon, delusions are difficult to explain and have a problematic conceptual status. Advances in understanding delusions have come from studies which involve detailed investigation of particular types of delusion. Some of this work is summarised, with the Capgras and Cotard delusions as specific examples. These are used to high-highlight questions for which there is the potential for fruitful dialogue with philosophers. Such questions include the criteria for deciding that a statement represents a belief, the extent to which we integrate our beliefs into a coherent web, and the nature and limits of human rationality.
3.
The Monist:
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Issue: 4
Philip Gerrans
Delusional Misidentification as Subpersonal Disintegration
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4.
The Monist:
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Issue: 4
John Campbell
Schizophrenia, the Space of Reasons, and Thinking as a Motor Process
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5.
The Monist:
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Issue: 4
Kai Vogeley
Hallucinations Emerge from an Imbalance of Self-Monitoring and Reality Modelling
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6.
The Monist:
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Valerie Gray Hardcastle, Owen Flanagan
Multiplex vs. Multiple Selves: Distinguishing Dissociative Disorders
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7.
The Monist:
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82
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Issue: 4
Robert L. Woolfolk
Malfunction and Mental Illness
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8.
The Monist:
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Issue: 4
Scope of Forthcoming Articles
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9.
The Monist:
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Issue: 4
Books Received
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