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1.
Health Care Anal ; 21(4): 306-22, 2013 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24026805

ABSTRACT

This paper explores Nietzsche's approach to the question of illness. It develops an account of Nietzsche's ideas in the wake of Arthur W. Frank's discussion of the shortcomings of modern medicine and narrative theory. Nietzsche's approach to illness is then explored in the context of On the Genealogy of Morality and his conception of the human being as "the sick animal". This account, it is argued, allows for Nietzsche to develop a conception of suffering that refuses to reduce it to modernist restitutive conceptions of well-being. Instead, Nietzsche advocates a more nuanced conception of varying degrees of health. This, it is argued, can be developed into a model that allows for a more satisfying conception of the relation between medical practitioner and patient.


Subject(s)
Disease , Health Status , Philosophy, Medical , Health , Humans
2.
Health Care Anal ; 21(3): 208-23, 2013 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23612784

ABSTRACT

This paper offers critical reflection on the contemporary tendency to approach health care in instrumentalist terms. Instrumentalism is means-ends rationality. In contemporary society, the instrumentalist attitude is exemplified by the relationship between individual consumer and a provider of goods and services. The problematic nature of this attitude is illustrated by Michael Oakeshott's conceptions of enterprise association and civil association. Enterprise association is instrumental; civil association is association in terms of an ethically delineated realm of practices. The latter offers a richer ethical conception of the relation between person and society than instrumentalism does. Oakeshott's conception is further illustrated by reflection on the connection between morality and religion that he explores in an early essay concerning "religious sensibility". Religious sensibility turns on the acknowledgement of the vulnerability of the self to the vicissitudes of life. This vulnerability cannot be bargained over instrumentally without imperilling the self. Religious sensibility is thus a valuable resource for criticising instrumentalist attitudes. It allows for the cultivation of ethical self-understanding that is essential to comprehending the conditions in virtue of which genuine civil life is possible. These conditions need to be taken into account in health care. Health care is not simply about substantive wants. It also necessarily concerns the universal and constant condition of being prey to illness that is the common lot of all citizens.


Subject(s)
Attitude to Health , Delivery of Health Care/ethics , Health Services/ethics , Morals , Religion and Medicine , Health Status , Humans , Professional-Patient Relations , State Medicine/ethics , United Kingdom
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