Relationship Between Language and Psychopathology Examined Under Conceptual Act Theory Lens and a Brief on Philosophical Implications: A novel perspective

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Abstract

This paper investigates the interplay between language and psychopathology through the framework ofthe Conceptual Act Theory (CAT), emphasizing the underexplored influence of semantic structures onemotional regulation. Using empirical evidence from alexithymia, semantic dementia, and schizophrenicflat affect, it proposes that deficits in semantic knowledge correlate with impaired emotional regulation,supporting CAT's constructionist view. Conversely, it examines the lesser-studied hypothesis thatexcessive emotional labeling may also impair adaptive regulation. This forms the basis for a spectrummodel linking psychopathological states with semantic density, where both ends—semantic deficiencyand excess—can contribute to emotional dysregulation. The analysis incorporates findings fromneurophysiology, cultural-linguistic studies, and therapeutic interventions, suggesting that linguisticrelativity may partially explain clinical and cultural variation in emotional experience and expression.Philosophical implications include reconceptualizing therapeutic metaphors from vertical ("depth") tohorizontal ("semantic modulation") orientations. The paper concludes with a call for an integrated,empirically grounded theory that bridges cognitive linguistics, clinical psychopathology, and culturalcontext, while outlining directions for future research and therapeutic application.

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