This essay explores the enduring relevance of Isaiah Berlin’s fox and hedgehog metaphor, famously applied to Tolstoy, to contemporary psychiatric practice. Psychiatry, historically grounded in rich theoretical traditions, has seen its focus shift over time towards structured diagnostic systems that emphasise clarity and manageability. While these developments brought important clinical advances, they also risked reducing the complexity of mental suffering to narrow categories. Drawing on phenomenological psychiatry and recent psychotherapy research, this essay argues for a renewed emphasis on subjective experience, patient agency and co-constructed meaning. Tolstoy’s scepticism towards grand explanatory narratives and his sensitivity to the contingent, fragmented nature of human behaviour resonate deeply with these contemporary concerns. However, a fully Tolstoyan stance poses its own risks too: loss of patient agency, clinician disengagement and increased vulnerability to burnout.
The essay proposes that psychiatry must navigate the tension between coherence and complexity, resisting both rigid theoretical allegiance and total relativism. Rather than choosing between the hedgehog’s unifying vision and the fox’s multiplicity, clinicians are called to adopt a more flexible and ethically grounded position. The concluding metaphor of the sphinx suggests a practitioner capable of holding multiple perspectives, sustaining meaning and acting with discernment amid uncertainty. In this light, Tolstoy’s unfinished worldview may offer not only a literary insight but also a profound clinical ethic.