
In this critique, language philosopher Bry Willis argues that modern psychology oversteps its boundaries by reframing philosophical positions as clinical pathologies. He contends that existential nihilism is an intellectual conclusion regarding the absence of inherent meaning, rather than a medical symptom like anhedonia, which describes a deficit in pleasure. By rebranding metaphysical beliefs as "maladaptive schemas," the psychological profession performs a systematic colonisation of philosophy to gain administrative authority over human experience. Willis suggests that this "boundary laundering" allows clinicians to dismiss profound existential arguments by categorising them as internal dysfunctions or mood disorders. Ultimately, the text asserts that reducing complex worldviews to measurable data strips them of their depth and moralises personal dissent under the guise of science.
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