Literature DB >> 22995017

Medicine and the individual: is phenomenology the answer?

Tania L Gergel1.   

Abstract

The issue of how to incorporate the individual's first-hand experience of illness into broader medical understanding is a major question in medical theory and practice. In a philosophical context, phenomenology, with its emphasis on the subject's perception of phenomena as the basis for knowledge and its questioning of naturalism, seems an obvious candidate for addressing these issues. This is a review of current phenomenological approaches to medicine, looking at what has motivated this philosophical approach, the main problems it faces and suggesting how it might become a useful philosophical tool within medicine, with its own individual, but interrelated, contribution to make to current medical debates. After the general background, there is a brief summary of phenomenological ideas and their current usage in a medical context. Next is a critique of four key claims within current phenomenological medical works, concerning both the role phenomenology plays and the supposedly clear divide between phenomenology and other approaches. There are significant problems within these claims, largely because they overlook the complexity of the questions they consider. Finally, there is some more in-depth examination of phenomenology itself and the true complexity of phenomenological debate concerning subjectivity. The aim is to show that it will be both more productive and truer to phenomenology itself, if we use phenomenology as a philosophical method for explicating and gaining deeper understanding of complex and fundamental problems, which are central to medicine, rather than as providing simple, but flawed solutions.
© 2012 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22995017     DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2753.2012.01926.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Eval Clin Pract        ISSN: 1356-1294            Impact factor:   2.431


  4 in total

Review 1.  Promoting the consumer voice in palliative care: exploring the possibility of using consumer impact statements.

Authors:  Ruth McConigley; Tania Shelby-James; David C Currow
Journal:  Health Expect       Date:  2013-08-19       Impact factor: 3.377

2.  Some thoughts on phenomenology and medicine.

Authors:  Miguel Kottow
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2017-09

3.  Putting phenomenology in its place: some limits of a phenomenology of medicine.

Authors:  Jonathan Sholl
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  2015-12

4.  The dental anomaly: how and why dental caries and periodontitis are phenomenologically atypical.

Authors:  Dylan Rakhra
Journal:  Philos Ethics Humanit Med       Date:  2019-10-26       Impact factor: 2.464

  4 in total

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