Literature DB >> 2339336

Clinical interpretation: the hermeneutics of medicine.

D Leder1.   

Abstract

I argue that clinical medicine can best be understood not as a purified science but as a hermeneutical enterprise: that is, as involved with the interpretation of texts. The literary critic reading a novel, the judge asked to apply a law, must arrive at a coherent reading of their respective texts. Similarly, the physician interprets the 'text' of the ill person: clinical signs and symptoms are read to ferret out their meaning, the underlying disease. However, I suggest that the hermeneutics of medicine is rendered uniquely complex by its wide variety of textual forms. I discuss four in turn: the "experiential text" of illness as lived out by the patient; the "narrative text" constituted during history-taking; the "physical text" of the patient's body as objectively examined; the "instrumental text" constructed by diagnostic technologies. I further suggest that certain flaws in modern medicine arise from its refusal of a hermeneutic self-understanding. In seeking to escape all interpretive subjectivity, medicine has threatened to expunge its primary subject--the living, experiencing patient.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2339336     DOI: 10.1007/bf00489234

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Theor Med        ISSN: 0167-9902


  8 in total

1.  On the nature of the physician's understanding.

Authors:  S Toulmin
Journal:  J Med Philos       Date:  1976-03

2.  Medical knowledge and the rise of technology.

Authors:  I R McWhinney
Journal:  J Med Philos       Date:  1978-12

3.  Clinical judgment and the rationality of the human sciences.

Authors:  E Gatens-Robinson
Journal:  J Med Philos       Date:  1986-05

4.  The patient as text: a model of clinical hermeneutics.

Authors:  S L Daniel
Journal:  Theor Med       Date:  1986-06

Review 5.  Medicine as interpretation: the uses of literary metaphors and methods.

Authors:  E L Gogel; J S Terry
Journal:  J Med Philos       Date:  1987-08

6.  Medicine and paradigms of embodiment.

Authors:  D Leder
Journal:  J Med Philos       Date:  1984-02

7.  Why medicine cannot be a science.

Authors:  R Munson
Journal:  J Med Philos       Date:  1981-05

8.  An introduction to medical phenomenology: I can't hear you while I'm listening.

Authors:  R J Baron
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  1985-10       Impact factor: 25.391

  8 in total
  28 in total

Review 1.  Das unheimliche--towards a phenomenology of illness.

Authors:  F Svenaeus
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2000

2.  Wisdom and the art of healing.

Authors:  Zbigniew Szawarski
Journal:  Med Health Care Philos       Date:  2004

3.  "Sticky" brains and sticky encounters in a U.S. pediatric pain clinic.

Authors:  Mara Buchbinder
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2012-03

Review 4.  Understanding medical symptoms: a conceptual review and analysis.

Authors:  Kirsti Malterud; Ann Dorrit Guassora; Anette Hauskov Graungaard; Susanne Reventlow
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  2015-12

5.  Hermeneutics in science and medicine: a thesis understated.

Authors:  L R Churchill
Journal:  Theor Med       Date:  1990-06

6.  Yearning for certainty and the critique of medicine as "science".

Authors:  Mark H Waymack
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  2009

Review 7.  Representations: an important key to understanding workers' coping behaviors during rehabilitation and the return-to-work process.

Authors:  Marie-France Coutu; Raymond Baril; Marie-José Durand; Daniel Côté; Annick Rouleau
Journal:  J Occup Rehabil       Date:  2007-06-13

8.  Moral perception and the pursuit of medical philosophy.

Authors:  D J Casarett
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  1999-04

9.  Hermeneutics and experiences of the body. The case of low back pain.

Authors:  W Dekkers
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  1998-06

10.  On medicine as a human science.

Authors:  Marco Buzzoni
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  2003
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