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Part III. Aspects of Intersubjectivity: A Neuropsychoanalytic Perspective

Depression: A neuropsychoanalytic perspective

Pages 207-213 | Received 19 Sep 2011, Accepted 01 Oct 2011, Published online: 22 Nov 2011
 

Abstract

As a psychoanalyst, I believe that conscious mental phenomena (such as feelings) are not epiphenomenal to the workings of the brain. Feelings evolved for good biological reasons; they make specific contributions to (unconscious) brain functioning. Notwithstanding all the philosophical complexities, the interactions between consciousness and unconscious brain functions are causal interactions. The tendency of modern neuroscientists (and biological psychiatrists) to marginalise consciousness in relation to how the brain works is likely to lead them badly astray. I illustrate this view by trying to address the question: why does depression feel bad?

Notes

1This article reiterates arguments published elsewhere, under the banner of “affective neuroscience”, by Watt and Panksepp (Citation2009), Solms and Panksepp (Citationin press) and Zellner, Watt, Solms, and Panksepp and (Citationin press). The present article frames this conception of depression for a psychoanalytic audience.

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