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Mental illness: An automatic, learned and stylized stimulus- response

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 April 2020

J.M. Vargas Ponciano*
Affiliation:
Centro de Investigación, Difusión Y Promoción de la Libertad Interior (Cipli); Director; Trujillo, Perú Fundacion por la Libertad Interior; Director; Trujillo, Perú

Abstract

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Background:

Author of the Scientific Theory "Something, that, my, self: Origin of other Life" and THERAPY OF TRANSFER (©USA) exposed: XXIV APAL Congress. IV World Congress on Traumatic Stress. 19th World Congress of Psychotherapy. 9th World Congress of Psychosocial Rehabilitation. XIII World Congress of Psychiatry. WPA International Congress (Istanbul2006).

Objective:

Demonstrate that ‘Mental Illness’ is a phenomenon initiated at home, reinforced in society and stylized internally.

Method:

Planned introspection, and meticulous evolutionary record of all those internal conflicts unleashed after tireless search of the I, during 30 years.

Results:

Paternal impositions, taking implicit social aims, are stimuli that wait, of child, a response; initially they do not work in an automatic way (due to gravitational Natural Inertia of organism tending to be interrelated with the Universe), but as punishment and recompense are imposing on him, time between stimulus-response will be diminishing until reaching the automatization. Reinforced and rewarded such a process, the individual, will be suitable to generate unthinking answers before any stimulus foreign to his essence. Given these conditions any impulse, image or idea arisen in mind unconsciously it turns into stimulus, to which, man, will not be able to escape, undo or obviate having to exercise necessarily an immediate response, according to needs of social rules, avoiding this way non-adaptation or interior conflict: Conditional Inertia.

Conclusions:

The dynamic mind-body, in ‘Mental Illness’, is a reply of the interrelationship father-child but stylized, in which, to less time between stimulus-response the worst it will be the forecast.

Type
Poster Session 1: Personality Disorders
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2007
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