In a recent paper Britton attempted to distinguish between a phantasy that has achieved the status of a belief and one that has not, and between a belief and knowledge. The author argues that, in the light of the seventeenth-century controversy between Descartes and Spinoza, both of these distinctions are untenable. Descartes argued, as Britton does, and as Freud did, that phantasies or ideas are not accepted as beliefs until they are tested against reality. Furthermore, Britton maintains that for a belief to acquire the status of knowledge, it must be supported by incontrovertible evidence. Spinoza, on the other hand, proposed the seemingly preposterous notion that a comprehended proposition is automatically believed. Doubt may subsequently be engendered by disconfirming evidence. As it turns out, research in a number of domains suggests that Spinoza was correct and Descartes was wrong. This evidence and its clinical implications are discussed. As suggested by Bion, instilling doubt regarding deeply ingrained (Spinozan-formed) phantasies is a principal goal of treatment.

Download full-text PDF

Source

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

psychic reality
4
reality unconscious
4
belief
4
unconscious belief
4
belief reconsideration
4
reconsideration paper
4
paper britton
4
britton attempted
4
attempted distinguish
4
distinguish phantasy
4

Similar Publications

Background: Phenomenological psychopathologists have recently highlighted how people with delusions experience multiple realities (delusional and non-delusional) and have suggested this double bookkeeping cannot be explained via predictive processing. Here, we present data from Kamin blocking and extinction learning that show how predictive processing might, in principle, explain a pervasive sense of dual reality.

Methods: This cross-sectional study involved three participant groups: patients with schizophrenia (SZ; n=42), healthy participants with elevated esoteric beliefs (EEB; clairaudient psychics; n=31), and heathy controls (with neither illness nor significant delusional ideation, n=62).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

[Adolescent mothers: the ambivalence of the desire for a child and the specific nature of maternity center care].

Soins Pediatr Pueric

August 2024

Laboratoire PCPP de l'université Paris Cité, Institut de psychologie, Université Paris Cité, Centre Henri-Piéron, 71 avenue Édouard-Vaillant, 92774 Boulogne-Billancourt, France. Electronic address:

In France, teenage pregnancy has remained a relatively moderate and stable phenomenon for several decades. Public discourse on young people's sexuality and the issue of teenage pregnancies focuses overwhelmingly on two themes: contraception and voluntary termination of pregnancy, leaving in the shadows the reality of the experiences of these young under-age mothers. Thus, one of the major challenges of support in maternity centers is to ensure the coexistence of psychic movements linked to adolescent reorganization and those linked to the birth of motherhood.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * The report talks about how people who got hurt are dealing with both physical injuries and mental health issues due to the violence they experienced.
  • * It suggests that healing should not just fix physical problems but also take care of emotional and social needs, including finding justice for those who were hurt.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!