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Bio-psycho-social interaction: an enactive perspective.

Sanneke De Haan

International review of psychiatry (Abingdon, England) August 1, 2021 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1080/09540261.2020.1830753 via PubMed

Summary

The biopsychosocial model holds that psychological and social processes contribute uniquely to psychiatric disorders, but it fails to explain how these different kinds of processes causally interact. An enactive approach resolves this by viewing cognition as embodied and embedded in living activity, adopting an organizational rather than linear notion of causality. This framework clarifies how physiological, psychological, and social processes can influence each other in the development of psychiatric disorders, informing interventions and self-understanding.

Study at a glance

Design theoretical or philosophical paper
Key finding An enactive approach, using an organizational concept of causality, can explain how biopsychosocial processes causally interact in the development of psychiatric disorders.

Abstract

What are the respective roles of physiological, psychological and social processes in the development of psychiatric disorders? The answer is relevant for deciding on interventions, prevention measures, and for our (self)understanding. Reductionist models assume that only physiological processes are in the end causally relevant. The biopsychosocial (BPS) model, by contrast, assumes that psychological and social processes have their own unique characteristics that cannot be captured by physiological processes and which have their own distinct contributions to the development of psychiatric disorders. Although this is an attractive position, the BPS model suffers from a major flaw: it does not tell us how these biopsychosocial processes can causally interact. If these are processes of such different natures, how then can they causally affect each other? An enactive approach can explain biopsychosocial interaction. Enactivism argues that cognition is an embodied and embedded activity and that living necessarily includes some basic form of cognition, or sense-making. Starting from an enactive view on the interrelations between body, mind, and world, and adopting an organizational rather than a linear notion of causality, we can understand the causality involved in the biopsychosocial processes that may contribute to the development of psychiatric disorders.

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