TY - JOUR
T1 - El trauma está en la respuesta. Hacia una visión postcausal en la definición de trauma psicológico
AU - Guerrero-Velázquez, Alberto
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Instituto de Filosofía, Universidad de Valparaíso.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - The concept of psychological trauma is polysemous and remains a subject of ongoing debate among scholars and researchers. One of the most significant discussions surrounding the definition of trauma is the relationship between traumatic events (TE), traumatic memory (TM) and trauma response (TR). Several definitions of trauma provided by world-renowned organizations present the TE as the primary element, suggesting a necessary causal relationship in which the TE is antecedent, and the TM and TR are consequent. I call this the strong causal view. In this article, I argue that the strong causal view is problematic as it does not sufficiently account for important trauma-related effects that pose anomalies for the causal position. I argue in favor of two claims. First, in defining psychological trauma, we must move beyond the need for a strong TE-dependent causal relationship and instead adopt a weak causal view. To support this, I review the discussion of causation in philosophy of memory that pits causal theories against postcausal theories, and propose two principles that can aid this transition. Second, I propose that among the three elements, TR should be the most critical in defining trauma. My aim is to support those definitions of psychological trauma that focus on TR, as I believe they offer greater explanatory power —especially regarding anomalies that challenge the strong causal view—and are more centered on the survivors' experience than those focused on TE.
AB - The concept of psychological trauma is polysemous and remains a subject of ongoing debate among scholars and researchers. One of the most significant discussions surrounding the definition of trauma is the relationship between traumatic events (TE), traumatic memory (TM) and trauma response (TR). Several definitions of trauma provided by world-renowned organizations present the TE as the primary element, suggesting a necessary causal relationship in which the TE is antecedent, and the TM and TR are consequent. I call this the strong causal view. In this article, I argue that the strong causal view is problematic as it does not sufficiently account for important trauma-related effects that pose anomalies for the causal position. I argue in favor of two claims. First, in defining psychological trauma, we must move beyond the need for a strong TE-dependent causal relationship and instead adopt a weak causal view. To support this, I review the discussion of causation in philosophy of memory that pits causal theories against postcausal theories, and propose two principles that can aid this transition. Second, I propose that among the three elements, TR should be the most critical in defining trauma. My aim is to support those definitions of psychological trauma that focus on TR, as I believe they offer greater explanatory power —especially regarding anomalies that challenge the strong causal view—and are more centered on the survivors' experience than those focused on TE.
KW - causal theory
KW - psychological trauma
KW - trauma response
KW - traumatic event
KW - traumatic memory
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85205137661
U2 - 10.22370/rhv2024iss26pp75-102
DO - 10.22370/rhv2024iss26pp75-102
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85205137661
SN - 0719-4234
SP - 75
EP - 102
JO - Revista de Humanidades de Valparaiso
JF - Revista de Humanidades de Valparaiso
IS - 26
ER -