Delirium Interpretive

Interpretive delusions are primary independent productive forms of a person’s figurative type of thinking, arising as a result of the transformation of delusional ideas, i.e. delusional attitudes directed “at oneself” or attributing an unfavorable image to others and tending to persist for a long time. The term was proposed by P. Douais in 1913 to refer to “delusional ideas about a specific delusional event.” Further, given its prevalence not only in psychiatry, but also in philosophy (Feuerbach, for example, considered the interpretive act as