In this article, we offer a critical perspective on recent phenomenological contributions that cite the work of classical phenomenological psychiatrists as both a critical framework and a model for contemporary research. Using Zahavi’s recent interventions in debates on the appropriate use of phenomenology in psychiatry as a focal example, we draw on the critical account of Erich Wulff—a phenomenologically trained German social psychiatrist—to highlight the epistemological, methodological, and practical shortcomings inherent in the structural approach adopted within classical phenomenological psychopathology. We anchor this critique in concrete case-study material. Although phenomenological psychopathology has undoubtedly provided valuable insights into patients’ subjective experiences, it was already criticized early on for its tendency to examine individual cases in isolation from their social and institutional contexts and for neglecting therapeutic and recovery-oriented dimensions. Although recent contributions in phenomenological psychiatry have begun to incorporate these contextual and recovery-related considerations, our aim is to underscore the continued importance of this integration by foregrounding the historical critiques of the early-now classical-approaches. In doing so, we seek to promote a more comprehensive and systemic understanding of mental disorders.
Thoma et al. (Sun,) studied this question.