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Related Experiment Videos

[Hallucinatory structure].

J D Moreno

    Acta Psiquiatrica Y Psicologica De America Latina
    |March 1, 1988
    PubMed
    Summary
    This summary is machine-generated.

    Hallucination is not an independent element but a structure-formed, interacting group element functioning within a system. This general system theory approach views hallucination as an open system, enabling identification through its pathological arrangement.

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    Area of Science:

    • Psychiatry
    • Systems Theory

    Context:

    • Traditional views often isolate hallucination as an independent phenomenon.
    • This study applies General System Theory (GST) to understand complex psychological phenomena.
    • Pathology is increasingly understood through systemic interactions rather than isolated symptoms.

    Purpose:

    • To demonstrate that hallucination is not an independent element but a structure-formed, interacting group element.
    • To propose a systemic model for understanding hallucination.
    • To apply General System Theory (GST) principles to psychopathology.

    Summary:

    • Hallucination is conceptualized as an open system, coupled with pathology, forming a structure-based interacting element.
    • The equilibrium of this system, under certain limits, allows for the identification of hallucination.

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  • Methodology aligns with GST, studying elements as functional parts within a system, emphasizing functional descriptions over particular ones.
  • Impact:

    • Shifts understanding of hallucination from an isolated symptom to a system-dependent phenomenon.
    • Provides a framework for analyzing psychological disorders using systems principles.
    • Highlights the relevance of interconnectedness in psychopathology research.