The Social Roots of Mental Disorders

normativity and evaluation in delusion and depression

This project has been completed. However, A CFP for a Topical Collection related to it is OPEN. The spin off of this project can be found here.

Mental health is today more important than ever and one of the great unresolved issues of contemporary societies. But what is mental health? what is a psychiatric disorder? The aim of this project is to attempt to clarify the nature of psychiatric disorders through an analysis of their social and normative aspects. The most widespread conception of psychiatry is that of a science responsible for identifying and treating disorders that are biologically based anomalies whose nature is independent of any human conception or activity. However, psychiatric diagnoses usually appeal to implicit norms and values. This aspect, together with the cultural and contextual variability of certain pathologies, suggests that the social component of disorders goes beyond what might appear at first sight. The project will apply some theories of social cognition in philosophy of mind to two particular phenomena: delusions, such as Cotard's syndrome, where patients claim to be dead; and depression, a widespread disorder in the West that is identified by a lack of motivation and interest or the absence of emotional reactions. 

Beca Leonardo

This project is funded by the BBVA FOUNDATION through the LEONARDO GRANTS. The Leonardo Grants for Researchers and Cultural Creators awarded by the BBVA Foundation are intended to directly support the work of researchers and cultural creators between the ages of 30 and 45 who, being in the intermediate stages of their career, develop a markedly personal and innovative project in the corresponding field of specialization or activity in areas like Basic Sciences, Biology, Environmental and Earth Sciences, Biomedicine, Economics, Social and Legal Sciences or Humanities.

About me

I am a Philosopher appointed in the Philosophy Department I and the Filo-Lab Unit  at the University of Granada thanks to a Juan de la Cierva Incorporacion research contract from the Spanish Ministry of Sciences and Innovation. 

My research interest concentrates on philosophy of psychology and cognitive sciences and their applications in areas as diverse as social robotics, mental disorders or social philosophy.