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Wouter Kusters - a certain kind of philosophizing may result in confusion, paradoxes, unworldly insights, and circular frozenness reminiscent of madness. Psychosis presents itself to the psychotic as an inescapable truth and reality.

A Philosophy of Madness: The Experience of Psychotic Thinking:  Amazon.co.uk: Wouter Kusters, Nancy Forest-Filer: 9780262044288: Books

Wouter Kusters, A Philosophy of Madness: The

Experience of Psychotic Thinking, The MIT 

Press, 2020.


The philosophy of psychosis and the psychosis of philosophy: a philosopher draws on his experience of madness.

In this book, philosopher and linguist Wouter Kusters examines the philosophy of psychosis—and the psychosis of philosophy. By analyzing the experience of psychosis in philosophical terms, Kusters not only emancipates the experience of the psychotic from medical classification, he also emancipates the philosopher from the narrowness of textbooks and academia, allowing philosophers to engage in real-life praxis, philosophy in vivo. Philosophy and madness—Kusters's preferred, non-medicalized term—coexist, one mirroring the other.

Kusters draws on his own experience of madness—two episodes of psychosis, twenty years apart—as well as other first-person narratives of psychosis. Speculating about the maddening effect of certain words and thought, he argues, and demonstrates, that the steady flow of philosophical deliberation may sweep one into a full-blown acute psychotic episode. Indeed, a certain kind of philosophizing may result in confusion, paradoxes, unworldly insights, and circular frozenness reminiscent of madness. Psychosis presents itself to the psychotic as an inescapable truth and reality.

Kusters evokes the mad person's philosophical or existential amazement at reality, thinking, time, and space, drawing on classic autobiographical accounts of psychoses by Antonin Artaud, Daniel Schreber, and others, as well as the work of phenomenological psychiatrists and psychologists and such phenomenologists as Edmund Husserl and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. He considers the philosophical mystic and the mystical philosopher, tracing the mad undercurrent in the Husserlian philosophy of time; visits the cloud castles of mystical madness, encountering LSD devotees, philosophers, theologians, and nihilists; and, falling to earth, finds anxiety, emptiness, delusions, and hallucinations. Madness and philosophy proceed and converge toward a single vanishing point.

A groundbreaking, deeply personal, magnum opus on madness and philosophy from a psychotic patient turned philosopher


“Experiences: what pressures do they, can they, or should they yield to? What kinds of sense can we extract from them? This remarkable book is full of bursts of interpretation that unfold if we detach experience from narratives that mores, norms, or reasonable expectations would impose. In vivid prose, Kusters traces continuities between detachments of “madness” and philosophy.” —Susanna Siegel

“A book about everything—whose center cannot hold, yet does. Kusters’s book explores both the philosophical meanings of madness and the madness of philosophy; its widening gyre brings much of existence into question, but into focus as well. A beautiful book: unique, generous, and profound, written with precision and fearless ambition. —Louis Sass


Wouter Kusters is a Dutch philosopher and linguist, he is best known for his books in which he describes his own experiences with psychoses. He is the author of *Pure Madness, A Quest for the Psychotic Experience*. In this episode we discuss his latest book *The Philosophy of Madness: The Experience of Psychotic Thinking*, alongside discussions on mysticism, transcendental philosophy and the line between reality and insanity.





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