1. IntroductionPart I. The anthropological roots of phenomenological psychopathology: core concepts
2. The Conditions of Possibility of Existence
2.1 Temporality
2.1.1 Transversal temporality
2.1.2 Longitudinal temporality 2.2 Spatiality
2.2.1 Distance - proximity
2.2.2 Centrality - peripherality 2.2.3 Integrity - fragmentation
2.2.4 Compression - relaxation
2.2.5 Collectivity - individuality
2.2.6 Horizontality - verticality
2.3 Interpersonality and intersubjectivity
2.3.1 The fragmentary nature of intersubjectivity and the limitations of absolute anthropological knowledge 2.3.2 Integrity and intersubjectivity: visuality and empathy
2.3.3 Modes of intersubjectivity: singularity, collectivity and anonymity
2.4 Embodiment
2.5 Identity, historical-self and ipseity
2.5.1 Otherness as a source of ipseity. The dialectic relations between identity and ipseity
2.6 The structure of existence
2.6.1 Structure of existence, positional sense, value sense and individual freedom
2.7 The ontological sense of phenomenological diagnosis - existential types and moderate realism
2.8 Imprecision and objectivity - second-person knowledge
2.9 The existential meaning of psychopathological experiences
2.10 The nosographic and nosological meaning of phenomenological diagnosis
Part II. Psychopathology and Substance Misuse
3. Anthropological Disproportions (Anthropo-pathologies)
3.1. Borderline disproportion
3.1.1 Intersubjectivity: relational hypo-sufficiency and heteronomy
3.1.2 Vulnerable and unstable temporality
3.1.3 The spatiality of extremes
3.1.4 Hyponomic fragmentation: borderline identity
3.1.5 Embodiment
3.1.6 Anthropological ambiguities of borderline persons
3.1.7 Dialectics of proportions and anthropological movement in borderline disproportion - clinical decision-making
3.2 Phobic disproportion
3.2.1 Phobic hyper-spatiality - fragmentation and proximity
3.2.2 Devouring temporality
3.2.3 Phobic intersubjectivity - hyper-transparency and its corrections
3.2.4 Social phobia and its phenomenological counter-phobic compensations
3.2.5 Tormented embodiment 3.2.6 Phobic ambiguity and clinical decision-making
3.3 Melancholic disproportion
3.3.1 Identity - hypernomic behavior
3.3.2 Spatial hyper-integrity
3.3.3 Embodiment: embodied feelings and inflexibility 3.3.4 Conservative temporality
3.3.5 Clinical decision-making in melancholia - the incarcerated clinician
3.4 Hyperthymic disproportion 3.4.1 Hyperthymic intersubjectivity - endoxia and the collective other pole
3.4.2 Temporality of conquest - the paradox of linear hyperprotension
3.4.3 Hyperthymic spatiality - horizontality and clarity
3.4.4 Hyperthymic identity - hypersymmetry
3.4.5 Iconic hyperactivity - embodiment in hyperthymia
3.4.6 Hyperthymic ambiguities and clinical decision-making
3.5 Compulsive disproportion
3.5.1 Spatial compression of the compulsive person and hypermeric embodiment
3.5.2 Homogeneous temporality
3.5.3 Identity in compulsion - adhesive condensation and sub-identities
3.5.4 Sub-identity condensation and phenomenological compensation
3.5.5 Relationship with the object - hypermeria and paradoxical transvaluation
3.5.6 Hyper-equal guardianship - intersubjective ambiguity of the compulsive person
3.5.7 The compulsive person's cohesive otherness and clinical decision-making 3.6 Obsessive disproportion
3.6.1 The present perfect o