- Psychiatry is shaped by implicit assumptions about reality, knowledge, and values, which require explicit recognition to guide clinical practice.
- Define conceptual competence as the practical ability to recognise and work with ontological, epistemological, and normative assumptions in care.
- Making philosophical assumptions visible enhances communication, clarifies disagreement, and supports more thoughtful, collaborative, transparent forms of care.
Psychiatr Serv. 2026 May 12:appips20260159. doi: 10.1176/appi.ps.20260159. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
This Open Forum introduces a new column, Philosophical Issues in Psychiatric Services, dedicated to exploring how explicit engagement with philosophical assumptions can strengthen psychiatric practice and service delivery. The author argues that psychiatry is inherently shaped by underlying assumptions about reality, knowledge, and values, which often remain implicit in clinical work. The author defines conceptual competence as the practical ability to recognize and work with these assumptions across ontological, epistemological, and normative domains. By making these assumptions visible, psychiatrists can reflect philosophically to improve communication, clarify disagreement, and support more thoughtful, collaborative, and transparent forms of care.
PMID:42118788 | DOI:10.1176/appi.ps.20260159
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