Mental Suffering as a Struggle with Words: Language and Emotion

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Mental Suffering as a Struggle with Words : Language and Emotion. / Rosfort, René.

In: Journal of Psychopathology, Vol. 22, No. 1, 2016, p. 10-20.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rosfort, R 2016, 'Mental Suffering as a Struggle with Words: Language and Emotion', Journal of Psychopathology, vol. 22, no. 1, pp. 10-20.

APA

Rosfort, R. (2016). Mental Suffering as a Struggle with Words: Language and Emotion. Journal of Psychopathology, 22(1), 10-20.

Vancouver

Rosfort R. Mental Suffering as a Struggle with Words: Language and Emotion. Journal of Psychopathology. 2016;22(1):10-20.

Author

Rosfort, René. / Mental Suffering as a Struggle with Words : Language and Emotion. In: Journal of Psychopathology. 2016 ; Vol. 22, No. 1. pp. 10-20.

Bibtex

@article{111dab255d5a475eb373b3ef040a3792,
title = "Mental Suffering as a Struggle with Words: Language and Emotion",
abstract = "Human emotional life is structured and to a certain extent constituted by language, and yet making sense of and communicating how we feel is often a challenge. In this article, I will argue that a person{\textquoteright}s struggle to make sense of and articulate her suffering plays a major role in the experience of suffering. I unfold this argument in five steps. I will first look at the vexed question of what emotions are. Discussing biological and rational conceptions of emotions, I argue that human emotions are deeply ambiguous phenomena constituted by an opaque combination of biological factors and rational factors. In the second section, I will argue that instead of trying to solve the ontological riddle of emotions we should investigate the actual experience of emotions. I examine the dialectics of the conceptual and the phenomenal aspects of our emotional experience, arguing that we need to adopt a phenomenological approach to emotions in order to explore the ambiguity of emotions. Anxiety is endemic to most mental illnesses, and nowhere does the ambiguity of our emotions become more manifest than in the experience of anxiety. So in the following two sections, I will look at two influential philosophical accounts of anxiety. Heidegger and Kierkegaard both argue that anxiety is intrinsic to our experience of freedom. I criticise Heidegger{\textquoteright}s theory for restricting the phenomenology of anxiety by making it a functional tool in his ontological project. I then argue that Kierkegaard{\textquoteright}s theory, on the other hand, allows us to explore the significance of the phenomenological ambiguity of anxiety. Of particular importance in Kierkegaard{\textquoteright}s theory is the dialectics of imagination and reality at work in anxiety, and in the concluding section, I will look at how this dialectics can help us understand how both the patient and the psychiatrist are challenged with the problem of finding a language for mental suffering.",
keywords = "Faculty of Theology",
author = "Ren{\'e} Rosfort",
year = "2016",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
pages = "10--20",
journal = "Journal of Psychopathology",
issn = "2284-0249",
publisher = "Pacini Editore SpA",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Mental Suffering as a Struggle with Words

T2 - Language and Emotion

AU - Rosfort, René

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Human emotional life is structured and to a certain extent constituted by language, and yet making sense of and communicating how we feel is often a challenge. In this article, I will argue that a person’s struggle to make sense of and articulate her suffering plays a major role in the experience of suffering. I unfold this argument in five steps. I will first look at the vexed question of what emotions are. Discussing biological and rational conceptions of emotions, I argue that human emotions are deeply ambiguous phenomena constituted by an opaque combination of biological factors and rational factors. In the second section, I will argue that instead of trying to solve the ontological riddle of emotions we should investigate the actual experience of emotions. I examine the dialectics of the conceptual and the phenomenal aspects of our emotional experience, arguing that we need to adopt a phenomenological approach to emotions in order to explore the ambiguity of emotions. Anxiety is endemic to most mental illnesses, and nowhere does the ambiguity of our emotions become more manifest than in the experience of anxiety. So in the following two sections, I will look at two influential philosophical accounts of anxiety. Heidegger and Kierkegaard both argue that anxiety is intrinsic to our experience of freedom. I criticise Heidegger’s theory for restricting the phenomenology of anxiety by making it a functional tool in his ontological project. I then argue that Kierkegaard’s theory, on the other hand, allows us to explore the significance of the phenomenological ambiguity of anxiety. Of particular importance in Kierkegaard’s theory is the dialectics of imagination and reality at work in anxiety, and in the concluding section, I will look at how this dialectics can help us understand how both the patient and the psychiatrist are challenged with the problem of finding a language for mental suffering.

AB - Human emotional life is structured and to a certain extent constituted by language, and yet making sense of and communicating how we feel is often a challenge. In this article, I will argue that a person’s struggle to make sense of and articulate her suffering plays a major role in the experience of suffering. I unfold this argument in five steps. I will first look at the vexed question of what emotions are. Discussing biological and rational conceptions of emotions, I argue that human emotions are deeply ambiguous phenomena constituted by an opaque combination of biological factors and rational factors. In the second section, I will argue that instead of trying to solve the ontological riddle of emotions we should investigate the actual experience of emotions. I examine the dialectics of the conceptual and the phenomenal aspects of our emotional experience, arguing that we need to adopt a phenomenological approach to emotions in order to explore the ambiguity of emotions. Anxiety is endemic to most mental illnesses, and nowhere does the ambiguity of our emotions become more manifest than in the experience of anxiety. So in the following two sections, I will look at two influential philosophical accounts of anxiety. Heidegger and Kierkegaard both argue that anxiety is intrinsic to our experience of freedom. I criticise Heidegger’s theory for restricting the phenomenology of anxiety by making it a functional tool in his ontological project. I then argue that Kierkegaard’s theory, on the other hand, allows us to explore the significance of the phenomenological ambiguity of anxiety. Of particular importance in Kierkegaard’s theory is the dialectics of imagination and reality at work in anxiety, and in the concluding section, I will look at how this dialectics can help us understand how both the patient and the psychiatrist are challenged with the problem of finding a language for mental suffering.

KW - Faculty of Theology

M3 - Journal article

VL - 22

SP - 10

EP - 20

JO - Journal of Psychopathology

JF - Journal of Psychopathology

SN - 2284-0249

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 153419613