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| Médium: | Recurso digital |
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Zenodo
2026
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| On-line přístup: | https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18336097 |
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- <p dir="ltr">Contemporary psychology repeatedly encounters domains treated as conceptual exceptions: severe trauma effects exceeding post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) framings, coercive relational and institutional systems, criminal harm, extreme biological constraint, contested memory phenomena, and taboo forms of high-salience choice. These domains are often approached as moral categories, diagnostic anomalies, or metaphysical controversies, producing conceptual instability and inconsistent clinical and forensic implications.</p> <p dir="ltr">This paper argues that such phenomena are not outside psychological organization. Rather, they represent edge conditions in which (a) coupling between functional domains becomes unusually strong, (b) risk and safety gating dominates access to higher-order functions, and/or (c) lower-dimensional constraints restrict the availability of higher-order organization. Building on a previously articulated architectural framework of psychological organization (Chu Nguyễn Đức Dũng, 2026a, 2026b, 2026c, 2026d, 2026e, 2026f), these domains are re-situated as predictable configurations of load, feedback disruption, and phase-dependent accessibility.</p> <p dir="ltr">The objective is not to unify etiologies or replace specialty literatures. Instead, this paper offers a cross-domain formulation grammar that reduces category error, clarifies recurrent misreadings of moralized or metaphysicized phenomena, and supports safer conceptualization across high-load clinical, forensic, and social contexts.</p> <p>Permissions Notice<br>This work is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution–NonCommercial–NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0).</p> <p>Any use involving adaptation, modification, translation, educational deployment, therapeutic application, derivative modeling, or inclusion in external platforms beyond unchanged archival hosting requires explicit written permission from the author.</p>