4.3 Review

Delusions beyond beliefs: a critical overview of diagnostic, aetiological, and therapeutic schizophrenia research from a clinical-phenomenological perspective

Journal

LANCET PSYCHIATRY
Volume 8, Issue 3, Pages 237-249

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S2215-0366(20)30460-0

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Delusions have historically been perceived as false beliefs held with certainty and without correction. However, a clinical-phenomenological framework offers an alternative perspective that emphasizes the experiential dimension of delusions, highlighting specific changes in self-consciousness and reality experience underlying delusions typical of schizophrenia. This alternative approach suggests new ways to advance current research and clinical practice by addressing empirical and conceptual issues that stem from neglecting the experiential dimension of delusions.
Delusions are commonly conceived as false beliefs that are held with certainty and which cannot be corrected. This conception of delusion has been influential throughout the history of psychiatry and continues to inform how delusions are approached in clinical practice and in contemporary schizophrenia research. It is reflected in the full psychosis continuum model, guides psychological and neurocognitive accounts of the formation and maintenance of delusions, and it substantially determines how delusions are approached in cognitive-behavioural treatment. In this Review, we draw on a clinical-phenomenological framework to offer an alternative account of delusion that incorporates the experiential dimension of delusion, emphasising how specific alterations to self-consciousness and reality experience underlie delusions that are considered characteristic of schizophrenia. Against that backdrop, we critically reconsider the current research areas, highlighting empirical and conceptual issues in contemporary delusion research, which appear to largely derive from an insufficient consideration of the experiential dimension of delusions. Finally, we suggest how the alternative phenomenological approach towards delusion could offer new ways to advance current research and clinical practice.

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