Thornton, Tim ORCID: 0000-0002-0137-1554 (2015) Against Explanatory Minimalism in Psychiatry. Frontiers in Psychiatry, 6 . ISSN 1664-0640
Preview |
PDF (Version of Record - Open Access)
- Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution. 162kB |
Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2015.00171
Abstract
The idea that psychiatry contains, in principle, a series of levels of explanation has been criticised both as empirically false but also, by Campbell, as unintelligible because it presupposes a discredited pre-Humean view of causation. Campbell’s criticism is based on an interventionist-inspired denial that mechanisms and rational connections underpin physical and mental causation respectively and hence underpin levels of explanation. These claims echo some superficially similar remarks in Wittgenstein’s Zettel. But attention to the context of Wittgenstein’s remarks suggests a reason to reject explanatory minimalism in psychiatry and reinstate a Wittgensteinian notion of level of explanation. Only in a context broader than the one provided by interventionism is the ascription of propositional attitudes, even in the puzzling case of delusions, justified. Such a view, informed by Wittgenstein, can reconcile the idea that the ascription mental phenomena presupposes a particular level of explanation with the rejection of an a priori claim about its connection to a neurological level of explanation.
Repository Staff Only: item control page