Wednesday, 17 June 2026

Epistemic Injustice in dialogue with phenomenological psychopathology

In this post, Lea Nickel explores the potential and limitations of phenomenological psychopathology for better valuing the experiences of people diagnosed with mental health problems.

Image credit: Wellcome Collection

People who are suspected of having or have been diagnosed with a mental disorder are often stereotyped in ways that undermine their credibility. The concept of epistemic injustice is an important analytical tool for capturing these experiences. Testimonial injustice can manifest itself in the form of prejudiced overgeneralization of statements and behaviour. An example would be when all statements made by a person with delusions are seen as delusional, therefore, interpreted as part of the delusional belief system. 

Another form of testimonial injustice is “diagnostic overshadowing”, which describes the tendency to attribute physical symptoms to a pre-existing diagnosis of a mental disorder. Hermeneutic injustice is fuelled by the dominant status of the third-person biomedical perspective on experiences and the excess credibility of psychiatric knowledge. These forms of injustice not only hinder individual recovery but also contribute to the structural discrimination of people with mental disorders. This highlights the need for a more inclusive incorporation of the experiences of those impacted.

I see phenomenological psychopathology as a suitable starting point for this. Rooted in Husserl's vision of phenomenology as a ‘rigorous science’ that strives for knowledge without preconception, phenomenological psychopathology is focused on the exploration of patients' first-person experiences. By actively bracketing assumptions and deep-rooted prejudices and empowering patients to develop their own interpretative frameworks, the factors contributing to epistemic injustice are reduced. In the following, however, I will examine one possible limitation of phenomenological psychopathology with regard to improving epistemic injustice.

When we deal with epistemic injustice in the psychiatric context, identity biases that affect people because of their mental disorder are central. We call those sanistic prejudices. Sanism, like other “isms”, is based on deeply rooted social constructs and structures that aim to disadvantage or exclude certain groups, and thus contribute to the maintenance of social inequalities. However, forms of discrimination rarely occur in isolation. If a person is impacted by sexism, racism, classism, ageism, ableism, homophobia, or transphobia, then these oppressive mechanisms also operate in the context of mental disorders. 

This can only be captured by an intersectional approach, which leads us to a closer inspection of the “phenomenological reduction” used in phenomenological psychopathology. In general, this means questioning assumptions about the person as well as their symptoms and possible diagnoses, in order to follow Husserl’s call to get “to the things themselves”. This, however, can lead to certain dimensions of experience, such as racialized and gendered experiences, being lost. As a result, differences in experience due to the different situations of those affected cannot be reflected. If the experiences of marginalized people are taken as a basis for knowledge without reflection and without naming the oppressive structures that produced these experiences, these very structures can be re-naturalized. In the context of phenomenological psychopathology, this could be countered through an “intersectional unfolding” as proposed by Spencer (2024). Here, the various social positionings and their effects can be addressed.

An interesting starting point for this is the connection between rationality and femininity. Historically, the feminine – and consequently women – have been pathologized as unstable, hysterical, deceitful, and irrational. What such an intersectional unfolding can look like is shown in Ruth Bankey's paper “La Donna è Mobile: Constructing the irrational woman”. She shows, based on intensive conversations with women impacted by agoraphobia with panic attacks, that their experience can be described as a fear of embodying the hysterical image, characterized by excessive femininity, loss of control, and potential “madness”. While phenomenological reduction carries the risk of perpetuating a kind of ignorance and thus upholding seemingly neutral conditions of experiences an intersectional framework allows clinicians to recognize how overlapping identities shape experiences of distress.

In general, the sexist ideas surrounding mental disorders make it difficult for marginalized people to understand their experiences beyond these discriminatory constructions. Thus, in order to fully analyse epistemic injustice in the psychiatric context, there must be an awareness of the intersections of different axes of discrimination. This addition would facilitate the capturing of different experiences and structures of meaning that arise from different social positions. Not only can phenomenological psychopathology be fruitful for combating epistemic injustice in the psychiatric context, the debate on epistemic injustice can be used to renew phenomenological psychopathology and make it more epistemically just.


Lea Nickel

Lea Nickel is a PhD candidate in the Department of Medical Ethics and History of Medicine at the University Medical Center Göttingen, Germany. Her dissertation is focused on the influence of AI on doctor-patient communication. Her research interests lie in the fields of ethics of AI, empirical ethics and epistemic injustice. She is particularly keen on amplifying patients’ perspectives in the design, evaluation, and implementation of AI-based technologies in medicine. 

She wrote her master’s thesis on epistemic injustice in the psychiatric context: “Reden ist Silber, Zuhören ist Gold. Phänomenologische Psychopathologie im Dialog mit epistemischer Ungerechtigkeit” [Talking Is Silver, Listening Is Gold: Phenomenological Psychopathology in Dialogue with Epistemic Injustice]. In November 2025 she was awarded the Prize for “Philosophy and Ethics in Psychiatry and Psychotherapy” by the German Society for Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Psychosomatics and Neurology for a shortened version of her thesis (forthcoming).