WHAT TO SAY ABOUT MINKOWSKI'S "LOSS OF VITAL CONTACT WITH REALITY"?
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This brief paper has the main objective of presenting in general terms our interpretation and description of Minkowski's famous text, which significantly defined his intellectual trajectory - the The notion of loss of vital contact with reality and its applications in psychopathology (1926). The entire linguistic fabric of this paper shows how the author, in a special and unique way, sees the interpretation of this text and its consequences. This means that what will be stated here does not closely and necessarily follow a phenomenological psychopathology of the loss of vital contact with reality. However, in the light of a personal interpretation, the author tries to somehow consider what Minkowski may have thought when writing this specific text. For the purpose of deepening and interpretative coherence, our text contains a personal analysis (self-analysis) in which the author experienced the aforementioned “loss of vital contact with reality”. Furthermore, we conclude that the vital reality of life being of absolute presence par excellence, we are all in some way inside or outside this “vital reality” subject at all times to a change in our psychological and, why not, pathological states.
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WHAT TO SAY ABOUT MINKOWSKI’S “LOSS OF VITAL CONTACT WITH REALITY”_.pdf
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