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The Expression of the Psychosomatic Body from a Phenomenological Perspective

by Bullington, Jennifer.
Authors: SpringerLink (Online service) Series: SpringerBriefs in Philosophy, 2211-4548 Physical details: VII, 105 p. online resource. ISBN: 9400764987 Subject(s): Philosophy (General). | Phenomenology. | Public health. | Psychology, clinical. | Philosophy. | Phenomenology. | Health Psychology. | Public Health.
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E-Book E-Book AUM Main Library 142.7 (Browse Shelf) Not for loan

Introduction -- Chapter 1. The Psychosomatic Problematic -- Chapter 2. The Lived Body -- Chapter 3. The Meaning of Meaning -- Chapter 4. The Lived Body (Phenomenology of Perception) and the Flesh (The Visible and the Invisible).- Chapter 5. The Phenomenological Psychosomatic Theory -- Chapter 6. Health and Illness and Holistic Health -- Chapter 7. Conclusions.

This book is a contribution to the understanding of psychosomatic health problems. Inspired by the work of the French phenomenologist Maurice Merleau-Ponty, a phenomenological theory of psychosomatics is worked out as an alternative to traditional, biomedical thinking. The patient who presents somatic symptoms with no clearly discernible lesion or dysfunction presents a problem to the traditional health care system. These symptoms are medically unexplainable, constituting an anomaly for the materialistic understanding of ill health that underlies the practice of modern medicine. The traditional biomedical model is not appropriate for understanding a number of health issues that we call “psychosomatic” and for this reason, biomedical theory and practice must be complemented by another theoretical understanding in order to adequately grasp the psychosomatic problematic. This book establishes a complementary understanding of psychosomatic ill health in terms of a non-reductionistic model allowing for the (psychosomatic) expression of the lived body. A thorough presentation of the work Merleau-Ponty is followed by the author’s application of his thinking to the phenomenon of psychosomatic pathology.

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