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A Tripartite Conceptual Model of Mental Disorder: ‎Normative, Harmful, and Epistemic Criteria in the Japanese ‎Context

Authors: H. Nakamura
Affiliations: Independent Researcher, Japan
Indexed in Crossref ✔, Google Scholar ✔, and NikoUArxive

Journal: Hyperscience in Psychology & Social Sciences (HPSS)

Volume/Issue: 2(1), 2026 | Pages: 1-4

ISSN: 3115-8625 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.55672/hpss2026pp1-4

Abstract

The concept of mental disorder remains one of the most philosophically complex and clinically significant constructs in ‎psychiatry. Although international classification systems such as ICD-11 and DSM-5-TR provide operational definitions, ‎fundamental conceptual ambiguities persist regarding the distinction between pathology, cultural variation, and socially ‎deviant behavior. In Japan, where psychiatric practice primarily follows the ICD system and cultural context plays a central ‎role in shaping normative expectations, definitional clarity is particularly important. This article develops a strengthened ‎conceptual framework grounded in three interdependent criteria: culturally contextualized deviation, harmfulness, and ‎epistemic incomprehensibility requiring professional explanatory systems. Through theoretical analysis and integration of ‎philosophy of psychiatry, cultural psychology, and Japanese sociocultural considerations, the study proposes a refined ‎descriptive definition of mental disorder. The model clarifies the boundary between pathology and rationally intelligible ‎misconduct while maintaining compatibility with contemporary psychiatric practice.‎

Keywords

Mental disorder, ICD-11‎, Japanese psychiatry, Cultural normativity, epistemic criteria, philosophy of psychiatry


License: CC BY-NC 4.0 | https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/