The epistemological role of empathy in psychopathological diagnosis: a contemporary reassessment of Karl Jaspers' account

Conclusions: Jaspers was right in stressing that psychopathological concepts of subjective mental symptoms represent patients' genuine abnormal experiences irreducible to concepts representing their associated behavioral manifestations. Moreover, he was right in stressing the importance of the empathic 'second person' approach to patients' mental experiences. However, he failed to recognize unambiguously that the epistemological access to patients' mental symptoms, though enormously aided by empathy, remains mainly indirect and thus requires also a 'third person' approach to them. Overall then, clinical psychopathological examination requires both a 'second' and a 'third' person approach, as well as their judicious alternation during the diagnostic interview. Although focused on Jaspers' essay, my critical analysis is also highly relevant to contemporary psychopathological approaches aiming to overcome the serious limitations of currently prevailing systems of diagnostic criteria of mental disorders.
Source: Philosophy, Ethics, and Humanities in Medicine - Category: Medical Ethics Authors: Source Type: research
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