Mentality as a Social-Existent Phenomenon: From The Body, Norms to Creative Labor

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Nguyen Thanh Minh
Đinh Van Chien
Nguyen Anh Quoc

Abstract

The study aims to shed light on the phenomenon of "psychosis" not just as a biomedical disorder but as a product of the interaction between the body, the individual, social norms, and working conditions. The research aims to point out the existential-social etiology of this pathology, and at the same time to find a philosophical basis for overcoming corruption and restoring humanity. The research method is implemented in an interdisciplinary direction, combining critical philosophy, sociology, and biomedical sciences. Qualitative methods, such as analysis-synthesis, interpretation-induction, and dialectics, are used to clarify the relationship between necessity and freedom, as well as between creative labor and alienated labor. Theoretical data are compared with real-life studies in medicine, psychology, and sociology to make sure they cover everything that has been seen. The results show that psychosis occurs when the person is cut off from his or her fundamental skills and needs and turned into a tool of norms, power, or money. In contrast, when an individual lives in a creative, truth-based, and free labor environment, unconditioned mental phenomena appear. At the same time, the study clearly distinguishes creative labor as the foundation of joy, freedom, and truth from corrupt labor as the source of suffering and unhappiness. The conclusion emphasizes that addressing the root of the mental problem requires an interdisciplinary framework in which critical philosophy, social science, and medicine complement each other. Only when truth, freedom, and creativity become the foundation of life can people overcome alienation, limit mental disorders, and create a human future.

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Mentality as a Social-Existent Phenomenon: From The Body, Norms to Creative Labor. (2025). Architecture Image Studies, 6(3), 666-673. https://doi.org/10.62754/ais.v6i3.272