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The phenomenology of the psychotic break and Huxley's trip: substance use and the onset of psychosis.

Barnaby Nelson, Louis A Sass

Psychopathology January 1, 2008 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1159/000152376 via PubMed

Summary

The paper explores the similarities and differences between the experiences of psychosis onset and substance intoxication, suggesting that both may share a 'psychotic-like experience' characterized by a breakdown in understanding reality. While psychosis leads to feelings of alienation from self and world, hallucinogenic experiences often evoke a sense of mystical union. The findings highlight the importance of considering subjective experiences in understanding the relationship between substance use and psychosis.

Study at a glance

Key finding There are significant parallels between the phenomenology of psychosis onset and substance intoxication, with psychosis associated with alienation and intoxication with mystical union.

Abstract

While considerable research attention has been devoted to the causal relationship between substance use and psychosis, the phenomenology of the association between the two has largely been ignored. This is a significant shortcoming, because it blinds researchers to the possibility that there may be elements of the subjective experience of substance use and psychosis that contribute to their apparent relationship in empirical studies. The current paper examines the phenomenology of the onset of psychosis and the phenomenology of substance intoxication through consideration of two texts: Sass's account of the phenomenology of psychosis onset and Huxley's account of the experience of hallucinogenic intoxication. Sass's account of psychosis onset includes four components: Unreality, Fragmentation, Mere Being, and Apophany. The analysis reveals significant parallels - and also some differences - between this account and the phenomenology of substance intoxication. We discuss the implications of this for the causal relationship between psychosis and substance use and suggest several ways of understanding the overlapping phenomenologies. This includes the suggestion of a shared factor, perhaps best described as psychotic-like experience, which seems to involve a breakdown of the sign-referent relationship and relationship with the common-sense, practical world. However, in the onset of psychosis, this breakdown is primarily experienced as a sense of alienation from self and world, whereas in the hallucinogenic state a sense of mystical union and revelation seems predominant. Further research may extend this analysis by looking at experiences with other drugs, particularly cannabis, and by examining the phenomenology of psychotic disorder beyond the first episode.

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