Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- Foreword by ANTHONY T. CARTER
- Preface
- 1 Medical anthropology and the problem of belief
- 2 Illness representations in medical anthropology: a reading of the field
- 3 How medicine constructs its objects
- 4 Semiotics and the study of medical reality
- 5 The body, illness experience, and the lifeworld: a phenomenological account of chronic pain
- 6 The narrative representation of illness
- 7 Aesthetics, rationality, and medical anthropology
- Notes
- References
- Author Index
- Subject Index
5 - The body, illness experience, and the lifeworld: a phenomenological account of chronic pain
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- Foreword by ANTHONY T. CARTER
- Preface
- 1 Medical anthropology and the problem of belief
- 2 Illness representations in medical anthropology: a reading of the field
- 3 How medicine constructs its objects
- 4 Semiotics and the study of medical reality
- 5 The body, illness experience, and the lifeworld: a phenomenological account of chronic pain
- 6 The narrative representation of illness
- 7 Aesthetics, rationality, and medical anthropology
- Notes
- References
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Summary
In his book Objective Knowledge, Karl Popper (1972: 106) outlines a “three world” theory, which serves as the basis for his epistemological arguments:
we may distinguish the following three worlds or universes: first the world of physical objects or physical states; secondly, the world of states of consciousness, or mental states, or perhaps behavioral dispositions to act; and thirdly, the world of objective contents of thought, especially of scientific and poetic thoughts and of works of art.
What I have described as biomedicine's “folk epistemology” is consistent with such an ordering of reality. Disease is located in the body as a physical object or physiological state, and whatever the subjective state of individual minds of physicians and patients, medical knowledge consists of an objective representation of the diseased body. I have argued for an anthropological alternative to such an analysis of medical knowledge, based on a critical examination of how medical practices and ontologies shape the objects of medical attention. However, the difficulties with the objectivist account are more immediately evident when we look closely at illness and its experience. For the person who is sick, as for the clinician, the disease is experienced as present in the body. But for the sufferer, the body is not simply a physical object or physiological state but an essential part of the self. The body is subject, the very grounds of subjectivity or experience in the world, and the body as “physical object” cannot be neatly distinguished from “states of consciousness.”
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- Chapter
- Information
- Medicine, Rationality and ExperienceAn Anthropological Perspective, pp. 116 - 134Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1993
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