Table of Contents
1. Introduction
Meta-Monism reframes psychiatric phenomena as disruptions of fundamental ontological operations. Rather than treating schizophrenia merely as a set of dysfunctions inside a neural substrate, we propose that schizophrenia manifests when the ontological act that constitutes Subjective Reality—the act of Self-Transformation (Tψ)—fails to process the internal conflict required for continued coherent selfhood. This failure is both descriptive and explanatory: it connects phenomenology (positive and negative symptoms) with a formal account of limits and thresholds.
2. CMI as a Condition for Healthy Subjectivity
According to Meta-Monism, conscious life (Subjective Reality, ψ′) arises from the act of self-distinction, which generates the Conflict Moment–Impulse (CMI, Δψ). A healthy psyche, like all Reality, is sustained by the tension between two Moduses:
Here A′ (Modus “Yes”) denotes identity, affirmation and structural coherence; −A′₀ (Modus “No”) denotes otherness, negation, effort and the impetus for growth. The ongoing, regulated conversion of these moduses is realized by Tψ: a mutual transformation that increases the complexity and robustness of ψ′. Suffering (−A′₀) is therefore not merely destructive; it functions as a necessary operand and catalyst for Tψ.
3. Schizophrenia as a Fracture of the Tψ Operator
Schizophrenia occurs when the biological apparatus realizing Tψ (the nervous system) cannot process the required rate or magnitude of Δψ-conversion. We introduce the concept of Power of Self-Transformation PTψ: the effective biological throughput capacity for handling ontological tension.
Schizophrenic collapse ⇔ ∇Urequired > PTψ.
Vulnerability. Weakness of PTψ may correspond to genetic predisposition, neurodevelopmental anomalies, or neurochemical dysregulations (e.g. dopamine system abnormalities). These factors lower the throughput and reduce resilience under rising ∇U.
Trigger. Typical onset in late adolescence and early adulthood (approximately ages 15–25) corresponds to a period of sharply increased ontological demands: new roles, autonomy, complex social expectations. In many individuals this raises ∇Urequired rapidly; if PTψ is insufficient, the system bifurcates toward collapse.
Phase-space intuition
A compact way to visualize the model is a two-dimensional phase-space with horizontal axis ∇U and vertical axis PTψ: stable identity maintenance occupies the region PTψ > ∇U; collapse occurs when the point crosses into ∇U > PTψ. The onset corresponds to a bifurcation point where the system leaves the stable basin.
4. Clinical Expression of Ontological Dissociation
When Tψ fails, the previously mutually convertible Moduses begin to act as autonomous chaotic forces; this manifests clinically in two complementary ways.
4.1 Positive symptoms: explosion of unconverted A′
Positive symptoms (hallucinations, delusions) are understood as a breakthrough of chaotic, unintegrated substance A′ into consciousness. Delusion functions as a catastrophic attempt to reimpose a maximally coherent—but falsely unified—identity onto the collapsing Δψ. Hallucinations are fragments of A′ appearing as perceptual content due to the inability of Tψ to discriminate internal differentiation from external stimuli.
4.2 Negative symptoms: defensive collapse of Tψ
Negative symptoms (apathy, anhedonia, avolition) represent a defensive refusal to continue engaging Tψ. When the system faces imminent disintegration because PTψ is exhausted, ontological self-withdrawal minimizes ongoing entropy by freezing the gradient ∇U. Avolition expresses a rejection of goal-directed transformation; apathy is an emotional flattening that reduces internal perturbation.
5. Therapy as Restoration of Tψ: Ontological Renovation
Therapeutic work aims not only to reduce symptom intensity but to reestablish the dialectical functioning of distinction.
Pharmacotherapy
Antipsychotics act as an ontological buffer: by attenuating excessive A′ activation (positive symptoms), they reduce effective ∇U, enabling a vulnerable PTψ to operate within tolerable bounds. Thus medication can create a time-window in which psychosocial and skills-based interventions can rebuild throughput.
Psychosocial rehabilitation
Rehabilitation and psychotherapy train micro-acts of Tψ: incremental, controllable transformations that gradually raise PTψ. Cognitive-behavioral strategies, social skills training, supported employment, and structured activity exposure all serve to rebuild rhythm and tolerance for tension while integrating A′ and −A′₀ into functional interplay.
6. Discussion
This account does not negate neurobiology; rather it situates biological findings within a coherent ontological framework. Neurochemical and structural vulnerabilities are reinterpreted as reductions in throughput capacity PTψ; psychosocial stressors increase ∇U. The model suggests testable predictions: interventions that effectively increase throughput capacity (neuroplasticity-promoting therapies, scaffolding of complex tasks) should reduce relapse probability when matched to graded increases in ∇U.
7. Conclusion
Schizophrenia, on this reading, is a failure of the act by which a subject continually constitutes itself. Recognizing the disorder as a fracture of the Tψ operator reframes therapeutic aims from mere symptom suppression toward the gradual ontological renovation of self-transformation capacity.
Suggested citation:
[Andrii Myshko]. “Schizophrenia through the Lens of Meta-Monism: The Pathological Failure of the Act of Self-Transformation.” Heretic Today Journal, 2025.