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Philosophical Interpretations and Existential Effects of Hallucinations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 April 2020

S. de Haan*
Affiliation:
Phenomenological Psychiatry, University of Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany

Abstract

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Within philosophy, hallucinations have served as a paradigmatic test-case for epistemology in general and for theories of perception in particular. The differentiation of hallucinations from “real-life-perception” poses some interesting problems. Here, I will focus on two opposing views: first the view of hallucination as a failure of a metacognitive ability, and second a phenomenologically based view of hallucinations as a disturbance of experiential world-directedness.

Our theoretical understanding of hallucinations however, should take the highly unsettling existential effects on the patients themselves into account as well. As one admits to have experienced a hallucination, this calls into question one's entire capability of perception in general. For how can one be sure not to be hallucinating again? The loss of a basic trust in one's own senses can be so stressful as to aggravate the existing symptoms. These existential effects show that perception cannot be taken as a singular faculty and strengthen the phenomenological approach to hallucinations.

Type
S28-02
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2009
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