Mind, Medicine, and Metaphysics: Reflections on the Reclamation of the Human Spirit
Abstract
Following the publication of such works as Auguste Comte’s Cour de Philosophic Positive (1830-1842), in which he argued the inherent immaturity of metaphysical discourse, metaphysics, for Western intellectuals—especially for Western intellectuals committed to science—has largely been abandoned. In recent years, however, we have seen renewed interest metaphysics among some researchers and clinicians, due, in part, to increasing attempts to integrate diverse fields of study into some unified and coherent understanding of human life. For many psychologists and psychiatrists, this renewed interest is accompanied by an implicit, and sometimes explicit, re-embrace of the notion of the “human spirit.” In this paper we explore some of the processes animating this movement and some of the clinical implications that flow from it.