Teacher
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MARRAFFA MASSIMO
(syllabus)
Since its birth, psychiatry has enjoyed an ambiguous status, which confined it in a scientific and cultural zone of its own, secluded from the landscape of the medical disciplines. Still today psychiatry is characterized by a composite nature, which belongs to both the biological sciences and the human ones, straddling the interpersonal and the intrapersonal, the social and the individual. Its roots can be traced to old moral themes and new scientific problems. This fact has been a source of debate and controversy for over a century—to all appearances, it was a theoretical stalemate. This course aims to evaluate the potential of cognitive neuroscience to help psychiatry to find a way out of this impasse.
(reference books)
G. Graham, The Disordered Mind. An Introduction to Philosophy of Mind and Mental Illness. Routledge, London 2010. One of your choice from: P. Gerrans, The Measure of Madness: Philosophy of Mind, Cognitive Neuroscience, and Delusional Thought, MIT Press, Cambridge (MA) 2014. C. Letheby, Philosophy of Psychedelics, Oxford University Press, Oxford 2021.
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