Depression and anxiety are increasingly commonly diagnosed mental health conditions in modern society, but where does the boundary between ordinary emotional experiences and an emotional disorder lie? Do we over-pathologize emotional disorders as a society? Does the field of psychiatry do the same? Weighing in on this debate, Gloria Sibson Ayob investigates the concept of emotional disorder, analyses the grounds on which an emotional state can be said to be disordered, and examines judgements of emotional health and pathology. The Concept of Emotional Disorder considers the evolution-theoretic framework currently used to explore the concept of emotional disorder, and its limitations, and offers an alternative analysis anchored in a conceptual-anthropological framework. Understanding the place of emotions, especially distressing and unpleasant ones in our lives, is essential to the pathologizing debate. By highlighting the role human values and concerns play in shaping emotional disorder and introducing new considerations that are key to the concept of emotional disorder, Sibson Ayob enriches our understanding of the value of emotions in human life and their conceptual structure.
About the AuthorGloria Sibson Ayob is Senior Lecturer in Philosophy and Mental Health in the Faculty of Health and Care at the University of Central Lancashire. Her research and teaching are rooted in the philosophy of psychiatry, particularly the concepts of emotional disorder, rational agency, and personal autonomy.
Book InformationISBN 9780198909606
Author Gloria Sibson AyobFormat Paperback
Page Count 256
Imprint Oxford University PressPublisher Oxford University Press