"This book is philosophically subtle and thorough, empirically
sophisticated, and sensitive to the complex phenomenology of both
normal and abnormal experience."
-- Stephen E. Braude, University of Maryland at
Baltimore County
In this book, G. Lynn Stephens and George Graham examine verbal
hallucinations and thought insertion as examples of what they call
"alienated self-consciousness." In such cases, a subject is directly
or introspectively aware of an episode in her mental life but
experiences it as alien, as somehow attributable to another person.
Stephens and Graham explore two sorts of questions about verbal
hallucinations and thought insertion. The first is their
phenomenology--what the experience is like for the subject. The
second concerns the implications of alien episodes for our general
understanding of self-consciousness. Psychopathologists look at alien
episodes for what they reveal about the underlying pathology of mental
illness. As philosophers, the authors ask what they reveal about the
underlying psychological structure and processes of human
self-consciousness.
The authors suggest that alien episodes are caused by a disturbed
sense of agency, a condition in which the subject no longer has the
sense of being the agent who thinks or carries out the thought.
Distinguishing the sense of subjectivity from that of agency, they
make the case that the sense of agency is a key element in
self-consciousness.
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