Dissociation and Temporality in Substance Abuse: A Clinical Phenomenological Overview.
Valerio Ricci, Giuseppe Maina, Giovanni Martinotti
Psychopathology January 1, 2024 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1159/000533862 via PubMed
Summary
The article examines the dissociative paradigm in addiction pathology, arguing that dissociation involves a structural fragmentation of the self that persists over time, not just isolated symptoms. It describes how addiction compresses vital space and freezes temporal perception, impairing emotion, sensation, and comprehension. The authors present a historical and phenomenological analysis of trauma and temporality to build a framework for understanding dissociation in addiction.
Study at a glance
| Design | theoretical or philosophical paper |
|---|---|
| Key finding | Dissociation in addiction is a structural process of persistent self-fragmentation that compresses vital space and freezes temporal perception, impairing all aspects of experience. |
Abstract
The term "dissociation" encompasses a wide array of symptoms and phenomena, all sharing the common characteristic of involving altered states of consciousness where an individual temporarily loses the sense of continuity of their own identity. In the context of addiction pathology, however, the dissociative paradigm remains a topic of ongoing debate. It fluctuates between the description of individual dissociative symptoms and the notion of post-traumatic dissociation as a structural process. This process involves fragmentation that extends beyond the confines of perception and experience within a singular moment, instead ensuring a persistent discontinuity of the self throughout one's existence. Pathological addiction stresses the question of the donation of sense in this deep and dramatic experience; it situates individuals within a compressed and constricted realm of vital space, alongside a frozen perception of time. Within this context, every emotion, sensation, and comprehension becomes impaired. Consequently, we have embarked on a journey starting with a historical analysis: the aim was to construct an elucidative framework for the dissociative paradigm in the context of addiction. This involves an in-depth exploration of the fundamental constructs of trauma and temporality, examined through the lens of phenomenological perspective.