Elena Bezzubova Ph.D. on July 8, 2013
The history of Depersonalization begins 133 years ago. It happens neither in clinical setting nor in scientific lab. A poet and philosopher Amiel described it in his diary, "The Journal Intime," as a form of philosophical search for self rather than morbid condition. His poetic introspection still stimulates debates about the dialectics of self-consciousness and reality.
The history of Depersonalization begins 133 years ago. It happens neither in clinical setting nor in scientific lab. A poet and philosopher Amiel described it in his diary, "The Journal Intime," as a form of philosophical search for self rather than morbid condition. His poetic introspection still stimulates debates about the dialectics of self-consciousness and reality.