The relationship between causal and meaningful (Jaspers) influences on behavior is explored. The nature of meaning essentially involves rules and the human practices in which they are imparted to a person and have a formative influence on that person’s thinking. The meanings that come to be discerned in life experience are then important in influencing the shape of that person’s conduct. The reasoning and motivational structures that develop on this basis are realized by the shape of the neural processing networks that constitute the mature human brain. This implies that meaning is not only realized by brain micro-structure but, in part, explains its workings. This in turn entails that in psychiatry we must continue to avail ourselves both of neuropsychology/neurobiology and of dynamic/meaningful explanation. © 1990 Kluwer Academic Publishers.
CITATION STYLE
Gillett, G. R. (1990). Neuropsychology and meaning in psychiatry. Journal of Medicine and Philosophy (United Kingdom), 15(1), 21–39. https://doi.org/10.1093/jmp/15.1.21
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