Science, Medicine, and the Aims of Inquiry
After its unparalleled rise and expansion over the past century, medicine is increasingly criticized both as a science and clinical practice for lacking scientific rigor, for contributing to overmedicalization, and for failing to offer patient-centered care. This criticism highlights serious challenges which indicate that the scope and societal role of medicine are likely to be altered in the 21st century. Somogy Varga's ground-breaking book offers a new perspective on the challenges, showing that they converge on fundamental philosophical questions about the nature and aim of medicine. Addressing these questions, Varga presents a philosophical examination of the norms and values constitutive of medicine and offers new perspectives on how to address the challenges that the criticism raises. His book will offer valuable input for rethinking the agenda of medical research, health care delivery, and the education of health care personnel.
- Reshapes thinking on medical research, healthcare delivery, and medical education
- Offers a new perspective on the challenges to medicine and points toward possible solutions
- Presents a philosophical examination of the nature and aims of medicine
Reviews & endorsements
'This book offers a novel view of the nature and aims of medicine, which is deployed to defend medicine from excessive scepticism while respecting and developing the challenges that medicine faces today. It is an important contribution to the philosophy of medicine.' Jacob Stegenga, Professor of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Cambridge
'This excellent book offers a careful and insightful analysis of the nature and aims of medicine. It is unique in positioning medicine in relation both to science and to ethics, and it systematically dismantles extreme stances on medicine while offering stances that are simultaneously moderate and novel.' Alex Broadbent, Durham University
Product details
May 2024Hardback
9781009450010
244 pages
235 × 159 × 18 mm
0.5kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction: medicine at the crossroads
- 1. Challenges to medicine at the end of ITS 'golden Age'
- 2. Toward a normative philosophy of medicine
- 3. Science and the nature of medicine: the systematicity thesis
- 4. Inquiry in medical science: the understanding thesis
- 5. Understanding in medicine
- 6. The aim of medicine I: the autonomy thesis
- 7. The aim of medicine II: current Alternatives
- 8. Rethinking the challenges: the Moderate Position
- Conclusion: disorientation and the 'greatest benefit to mankind'
- References
- Index.