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Values, Health, and Medicine

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 April 2022

William K. Goosens*
Affiliation:
Lawrence University

Abstract

This paper argues for the importance of approaching medicine, as a theoretical science, through values. The normative concepts of benefit and harm are held to provide a framework for the analysis of medicine which reflects the obligations of the doctor-patient relationship, suffices to define the key concept of medical relevance, yields a general necessary condition for the basic concepts of medicine, explains the role of such nonnormative conceptions as discomfort, dysfunction, and incapacity, and avoids the mistakes of other normative approaches which hold that unhealthy conditions are disvaluable or should be treated. Neutralist analyses are criticized, especially those approaching health through proper functioning.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Philosophy of Science Association 1980

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Footnotes

Ancestors of this paper benefited from insightful questions from the Department of Philosophy, Purdue University, and from correspondence with Christopher Boorse and David Hull.

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