# Depression as inferential rigidity: a meta-abductive account

**Authors:** Jian Sun, Li Jin

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2026.1776494 · Frontiers in Psychology · 2026-03-03

## TL;DR

This paper explains depression as a form of rigid thinking, where people fixate on negative beliefs and struggle to adapt their reasoning, leading to chronic mental health issues.

## Contribution

The paper introduces a novel three-layer model of depressive inferential pathology based on hierarchical abductive reasoning.

## Key findings

- Depressive cognitive rigidity arises from structural reasoning defects, not just negative beliefs.
- Three interlocking inferential failures explain the persistence of depression and resistance to change.
- Restoring meta-abductive capacity could improve interventions by focusing on revisable explanatory practices.

## Abstract

Depression is a highly prevalent mental disorder worldwide, and its cognitive rigidity—characterized by persistent negative beliefs resistant to countervailing evidence—remains a critical puzzle in philosophical psychiatry and clinical psychology. Existing theories of abductive reasoning have struggled to explain why similar adversities lead to rigid negative cognition in some individuals but adaptive coping in others.

Drawing on a hierarchical reconstruction of Peircean abduction, this study develops a three-layer model of depressive inferential pathology. The theoretical framework integrates insights from embodied cognition, existential phenomenology, and epistemic consequentialism to analyze the formal structure of depressive reasoning.

The model identifies three interlocking inferential failures: (1) First-order pathology: Fixation of negatively self-referential abductive explanations, narrowing explanatory space; (2) Core pathology: Failure of meta-abduction, eliminating reflective revision of explanatory practices and cognitive adaptability; (3) Inferential extension: Rigid abductive conclusions are treated as absolute premises for destructive deductive reasoning, generating self-negating conclusions and closed ruminative loops. This model unifies clinical phenomena such as rumination and cognitive distortion, and clarifies the transition from situational responses to chronic pathology.

The findings suggest that depressive cognitive rigidity stems not from negative belief content alone, but from structural defects in reasoning. Effective intervention should focus on restoring meta-abductive capacity—treating one’s own explanatory practices as revisable—complementing traditional approaches that target belief correction. This framework bridges philosophical psychiatry and clinical theory, offering a unified account of depression’s cognitive persistence and resistance to intervention.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** depression (MONDO:0002050)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** mental disorder (MESH:D001523), rigidity (MESH:D009127), depressive cognitive rigidity (MESH:D060825), Depression (MESH:D003866)

## Full text

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## References

37 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12992217/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12992217