ABSTRACT

In the World Library of Psychologists series, international experts present career-long collections of what they judge to be their finest pieces – extracts from books, key articles, salient research findings, and their major practical theoretical contributions.

In this fascinating collection, Professor Gordon Claridge charts the development of a model of mental health that blurs the line between madness and sanity, conditions such as schizophrenia and other forms of psychosis seen as dimensions of ‘normal’ personality and temperament rather than separate abnormalities. Working with, and influenced by, the late Hans Eysenck, Claridge is celebrated for evolving research on personality and psychological disorders into a revised view of the spectrum of psychotic traits. The concept of schizotypy, re-evaluated by Claridge, sees mental illness not as a pathology suffered by a few, but as the end of a continuum experienced by us all. Psychopathology and Personality Dimensions brings together some of the author’s most influential publications on the topics of schizotypy and psychoticism, personality disorders, and the use of drug techniques to investigate normal and abnormal individual differences.

Interspersed throughout with specially-written retrospectives by Professor Claridge, looking back at his work and contextualising where it sits in the wider literature, the collection illustrates a radical and influential model of mental illness that continues to resonate today. This book is an essential resource for all those engaged or interested in the field of personality and psychological disorders.

chapter |2 pages

Commentary

chapter 4|17 pages

Why drug effects vary

chapter 6|27 pages

Animal models of schizophrenia

The case for LSD-25

chapter 7|10 pages

Covariation between two-flash threshold and skin conductance level in first-breakdown schizophrenics

Relationships in drug-free patients and effects of treatment

chapter 8|13 pages

LSD

A missed opportunity?

chapter 10|15 pages

Theoretical background and issues

chapter 12|14 pages

The Oxford-Liverpool Inventory of Feelings and Experiences (O-LIFE)

Further description and extended norms

chapter 14|13 pages

Creativity

A healthy side of madness