Results for 'Holistic medicine '

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  1.  23
    Holistic Medicine as a Method of Causal Explanation, Treatment, and Prevention in Clinical Work: Obstacle or Opportunity for Development?Erik Allander - 1984 - In Lennart Nordenfelt & B. I. B. Lindahl (eds.), Health, Disease, and Causal Explanations in Medicine. Reidel. pp. 215--223.
  2.  15
    Examining Holistic Medicine.Douglas Stalker & Clark N. Glymour (eds.) - 1985 - Prometheus Books.
    Essays discuss the history, philosophy, methodology, and practices of holistic medicine.
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  3.  63
    Plato and holistic medicine.William E. Stempsey - 2001 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 4 (2):201-209.
    Popular visions of holistic health and holistic medicine are not so much reactions to perceived excesses of technological medicine as they are visions of the good life itself and how to attain it. This paper attempts to clarify some of the concepts associated with holistic health and medicine. The particular vision of holistic health presented here is well exemplified in the writings of Plato. First, I examine the scientific concept of holism and argue (...)
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  4.  42
    Is Homeopathy a Science?—Continuity and Clash of Concepts of Science within Holistic Medicine.Josef M. Schmidt - 2009 - Journal of Medical Humanities 30 (2):83-97.
    The question of whether homeopathy is a science is currently discussed almost exclusively against the background of the modern concept of natural science. This approach, however, fails to notice that homeopathy—in terms of history of science—rests on different roots that can essentially be traced back to two most influential traditions of science: on the one hand, principles and notions of Aristotelism which determined 2,000 years of Western history of science and, on the other hand, the modern concept of natural science (...)
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  5.  4
    On the body in medical self-care and holistic medicine.Anthony Weston - 1992 - In Drew Leder (ed.), The Body in Medical Thought and Practice. Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 69--84.
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  6.  36
    The new holism: P4 systems medicine and the medicalization of health and life itself.Henrik Vogt, Bjørn Hofmann & Linn Getz - 2016 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 19 (2):307-323.
    The emerging concept of systems medicine (or ‘P4 medicine’—predictive, preventive, personalized and participatory) is at the vanguard of the post-genomic movement towards ‘precision medicine’. It is the medical application of systems biology, the biological study of wholes. Of particular interest, P4 systems medicine is currently promised as a revolutionary new biomedical approach that is holistic rather than reductionist. This article analyzes its concept of holism, both with regard to methods and conceptualization of health and disease. (...)
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  7.  14
    Holistic Healing: An Analytical Review of Medicine-men in African Societies.Peter M. Mumo - 2012 - Thought and Practice: A Journal of the Philosophical Association of Kenya 4 (1):111-122.
    Since the advent of modernity and Christianity in Africa, indigenous African holistic healing, and especially its psychological aspect, has been given negative publicity. This article examines ways in which African traditional medicine men made and continue to make a significant contribution to healing in their societies. It argues that due to the numerous challenges in contemporary African societies, there is need for a pragmatic approach, in which all innovations that can alleviate human suffering are taken on board and (...)
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  8.  53
    Towards a Medicine of the Whole Person – knowledge, practice and holism in the care of the sick.Andrew Miles - 2009 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 15 (6):887-890.
  9. Ways of Health Holistic Approaches to Ancient and Contemporary Medicine.David S. Sobel - 1979 - Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, C1979.
     
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  10.  18
    Holistic Health and Biomedical Medicine[REVIEW]Hela Michot-Dietrich - 1992 - International Studies in Philosophy 24 (1):115-116.
  11. The first holistic revolution: alternative medicine in the nineteenth century.James C. Whorton, D. Stalker & C. Glymour - 1989 - In Douglas Stalker & Clark Glymour (eds.), Examining Holistic Medicine. Prometheus Books. pp. 29--48.
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  12. The Framework of Holism in TCM and Western Medicine.Zhu Ming - 2005 - In Friedrich Wallner, Martin J. Jandl & Kurt Greiner (eds.), Science, Medicine, and Culture: Festschrift for Fritz G. Wallner. Peter Lang. pp. 155.
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  13.  34
    Holistic health in perspective.Phyllis H. Mattson - 1982 - Palo Alto, Calif.: Mayfield Pub. Co..
    : Holistic health principles, practices, personnel, programs, and problems comprise the ingredients of the movement of holistic health as described in this book. Using medical anthropology as its main perspective, the text is written with health practitioners in mind, to provide a contract of an interrelated physical, mental, spiritual, and emotional view of healing with that of the established scientific view: that humans are composed of reducible parts and that medicine's job is to find causes of malfunctioning (...)
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  14.  11
    Glasgow’s ‘sick society’?: James Halliday, psychosocial medicine and medical holism in Britain c.1920–48.Andrew Hull - 2012 - History of the Human Sciences 25 (5):73-90.
    James Lorimer Halliday (1897–1983) pioneered the development of the concept of psychosocial medicine in Britain in the 1930s and 1940s. He worked in Glasgow, first as a public health doctor, and then as part of the corporatist National Health Insurance scheme. Here he learned about links between poverty, the social environment, emotional stress and psychological and physical ill-health, and about statistical tools for making such problems scientifically visible. The intellectual development of his methodologically and epistemologically integrated medicine (...)
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  15.  6
    Glasgow’s ‘sick society’?: James Halliday, psychosocial medicine and medical holism in Britain c.1920–48.Andrew Hull - 2012 - History of the Human Sciences 25 (5):73-90.
    James Lorimer Halliday pioneered the development of the concept of psychosocial medicine in Britain in the 1930s and 1940s. He worked in Glasgow, first as a public health doctor, and then as part of the corporatist National Health Insurance scheme. Here he learned about links between poverty, the social environment, emotional stress and psychological and physical ill-health, and about statistical tools for making such problems scientifically visible. The intellectual development of his methodologically and epistemologically integrated medicine – a (...)
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  16.  9
    Holism and the Understanding of Science: Integrating the Analytical, Historical and Sociological.Louis Caruana - 2000 - Routledge.
    "This book addresses issues which are central in the philosophy of science, exploring a large and relevant literature. It should be of broad interest in the philosophy of science community." Professor Peter Lipton, Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Cambridge, UK. How can the complexities of understanding science be dealt with as a whole? Is philosophical realism still a defensible philosophical position? Exploring such fundamental questions, this book claims that science ought to be understood in terms of (...)
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  17.  4
    The concept of holism - (c.) thumiger (ed.) Holism in ancient medicine and its reception. (Studies in ancient medicine 53.) pp. XIV + 447, b/w & colour ills. Leiden and boston: Brill, 2021. Cased, €125, us$150. Isbn: 978-90-04-44308-2. [REVIEW]Robert Vinkesteijn - 2022 - The Classical Review 72 (1):302-305.
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  18.  25
    Of Two Lives One? Jean-Charles-Marguerite-Guillaume Grimaud and the Question of Holism in Vitalist Medicine.Elizabeth A. Williams - 2008 - Science in Context 21 (4):593-613.
    ArgumentMontpellier vitalists upheld a medical perspective akin to modern “holism” in positing the functional unity of creatures imbued with life. While early vitalists focused on the human organism, Jean-Charles-Marguerite-Guillaume Grimaud investigated digestion, growth, and other physiological processes that human beings shared with simpler organisms. Eschewing modern investigative methods, Grimaud promoted a medically-grounded “metaphysics.” His influential doctrine of the “two lives” broke with Montpellier holism, classifying some vital phenomena as “higher” and others as “lower” and attributing the “nobility” of the human (...)
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  19.  82
    Holism and Reductionism in the Illness/Disease Debate.Marco Buzzoni, Luigi Tesio & Michael T. Stuart - 2022 - In Shyam Wuppuluri & Ian Stewart (eds.), From Electrons to Elephants and Elections: Saga of Content and Context. Springer. pp. 743-778.
    In the last decades it has become clear that medicine must find some way to combine its scientific and humanistic sides. In other words, an adequate notion of medicine requires an integrative position that mediates between the analytic-reductionist and the normative-holistic tendencies we find therein. This is especially important as these different styles of reasoning separate “illness” (something perceived and managed by the whole individual in concert with their environment) and “disease” (a “mechanical failure” of a biological (...)
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  20.  12
    Whole in Body, Mind & Spirit: Holistic Health and the Limits of Medicine.Sally Guttmacher - 1979 - Hastings Center Report 9 (2):15-16.
  21.  49
    Strong holism, weak holism, and health.Inge-Bert Täljedal - 2004 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 7 (2):143-148.
    The health theories of Nordenfelt and Boorse are compared. Critical attention is focused on Nordenfelt's description of his theory as one of holistic welfare, contrasting with Boorse's analytical and statistical approach. Neither theory is found to give an entirely satisfactory account of ‘health’ in scientific medicine or common usage. Because Nordenfelt attenuates the ontological significance of organs and organ parts and simplifies the role of statistics, his theory is regarded as weakly holistic. Boorse underrates the importance of (...)
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  22. Helen Tager-flusberg, Daniela plesa-skwerer, Susan faja and Robert M. Joseph (boston university school of medicine) people with Williams syndrome process faces holistically, 11–24 Boaz keysar, shuhong Lin (the university of chicago) and Dale J. Barr (the university of california). [REVIEW]Elan Barenholtz, Elias H. Cohen, Jacob Feldman & Manish Singh - 2003 - Cognition 89:297-298.
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  23.  57
    The Holistic Claims of the Biopsychosocial Conception of WHO's International Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health (ICF): A Conceptual Analysis on the Basis of a Pluralistic-Holistic Ontology and Multidimensional View of the Human being.H. M. Solli & A. Barbosa da Silva - 2012 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 37 (3):277-294.
    The International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF), designed by the WHO, attempts to provide a holistic model of functioning and disability by integrating a medical model with a social one. The aim of this article is to analyze the ICF’s claim to holism. The following components of the ICF’s complexity are analyzed: (1) health condition, (2) body functions and structures, (3) activity, (4) participation, (5) environmental factors, (6) personal factors, and (7) health. Although the ICF claims to (...)
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  24.  75
    Holism and reductionism: A view from genetics.Arthur Zucker - 1981 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 6 (2):145-164.
    are often used loosely – especially in medical contexts. In an attempt to remedy this, these terms are explored from the standpoints of: philosophy of science, medicine, genetics, history of genetics and clinical genetics. A sense for ‘reductionism’ is developed in part by focusing on the related histories of classical genetics and clinical genetics. This done, the dichotomy between holism and reductionism, whether in basic genetics or the genetic counseling situation, loses much of its force. CiteULike Connotea Del.icio.us What's (...)
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  25.  11
    Innovative Holistic Teaching in a Canadian Neonatal Perinatal Residency Program.Thierry Daboval, Emanuela Ferretti & Gregory P. Moore - 2014 - Hastings Center Report 44 (6):21-25.
    Ethically complex and challenging cases confront health care professionals in neonatal‐perinatal medicine more often than in most other subspecialties in medicine. Neonatologists regularly encounter situations where crucial life‐or‐death decisions need to be made in the best interest of an infant and its family. While physicians and their professional societies seem to dictate this best interest standard by weighing the risk of mortality and morbidities, parents may have other perspectives to be considered.Our review of programs for teaching ethics in (...)
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  26.  67
    The Holistic Health Movement: A Survey and Critique.L. Kopelman & J. Moskop - 1981 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 6 (2):209-235.
    This article discusses the nature and significance of the holistic health movement in four ways. First, a general characterization of the movement is proposed, based on shared commitment to five assumptions: (1) a positive view of health as well-being, (2) individual responsibility for health, (3) the importance of health education, (4) control of social and environmental determinants of health, and (5) low technology or “natural” therapeutic techniques. Second, a basic difference among advocates of holistic health/medicine is proposed (...)
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  27.  23
    How to Be a Holist Who Rejects the Biopsychosocial Model.Diane O’Leary - 2021 - European Journal of Analytic Philosophy 17 (2):(M4)5-20.
    After nearly fifty years of mea culpas and explanatory additions, the biopsychosocial model is no closer to a life of its own. Bolton and Gillett give it a strong philosophical boost in The Biopsychosocial Model of Health and Disease, but they overlook the model’s deeply inconsistent position on dualism. Moreover, because metaphysical confusion has clinical ramifications in medicine, their solution sidesteps the model’s most pressing clinical faults. But the news is not all bad. We can maintain the merits of (...)
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  28. The naturalness of the artificial and our concepts of health, disease and medicine.Y. Michael Barilan & Moshe Weintraub - 2001 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 4 (3):311-325.
    This article isolates ten prepositions, which constitute the undercurrent paradigm of contemporary discourse of health disease and medicine. Discussion of the interrelationship between those prepositions leads to a systematic refutation of this paradigm. An alternative set is being forwarded. The key notions of the existing paradigm are that health is the natural condition of humankind and that disease is a deviance from that nature. Natural things are harmonious and healthy while human made artifacts are coercive interference with natural balance. (...)
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  29.  9
    Sustainable medicine: whistle-blowing on 21st-century medical practice.Sarah Myhill - 2015 - White River Junction, Vermont: Chelsea Green Publishing.
    Sustainable Medicine is based on the premise that twenty-first century Western medicine--driven by vested interests--is failing to address the root causes of disease. Symptom-suppressing medication and "polypharmacy" have resulted in an escalation of disease and a system of so-called "health care," which more closely resembles "disease care." In this essential book, Dr. Sarah Myhill aims to empower people to heal themselves by addressing the underlying causes of their illness. She presents a logical progression from identifying symptoms, to understanding (...)
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  30. Individualist Biocentrism vs. Holism Revisited.Katie McShane - 2014 - Les ateliers de l'éthique/The Ethics Forum 9 (2):130-148.
    While holist views such as ecocentrism have considerable intuitive appeal, arguing for the moral considerability of ecological wholes such as ecosystems has turned out to be a very difficult task. In the environmental ethics literature, individualist biocentrists have persuasively argued that individual organisms—but not ecological wholes—are properly regarded as having a good of their own . In this paper, I revisit those arguments and contend that they are fatally flawed. The paper proceeds in five parts. First, I consider some problems (...)
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  31.  55
    On holism and normality.Lennart Nordenfelt - 2004 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 7 (2):149-152.
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  32.  79
    Adolf Meyer-Abich, Holism, and the Negotiation of Theoretical Biology.Kevin S. Amidon - 2008 - Biological Theory 3 (4):357-370.
    Adolf Meyer-Abich spent his career as one of the most vigorous and varied advocates in the biological sciences. Primarily a philosophical proponent of holistic thought in biology, he also sought through collaboration with empirically oriented colleagues in biology, medicine, and even physics to develop arguments against mechanistic and reductionistic positions in the life sciences, and to integrate them into a newly disciplinary theoretical biology. He participated in major publishing efforts including the founding of Acta Biotheoretica. He also sought (...)
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  33.  13
    Spirituality and healthcare: Towards holistic people-centred healthcare in South Africa.Andre De la Porte - 2016 - HTS Theological Studies 72 (4):1-9.
    Healthcare in South Africa is in a crisis. Problems with infrastructure, management, human resources and the supply of essential medicines are at a critical level. This is compounded by a high burden of disease and disparity in levels of service delivery, particularly between public and private healthcare. The government has put ambitious plans in place, which are part of the National Development Plan to ward 2030. In the midst of this we find the individual person and their family and community (...)
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  34.  76
    Biopsychosociospiritual Medicine and Other Political Schemes.J. P. Bishop - 2009 - Christian Bioethics 15 (3):254-276.
    In the mid-1970s, the biomedical model of medicine gave way to the biopsychosocial model of medicine; it was billed as a more comprehensive and compassionate model of medicine. After more than a century of disentangling medicine from religion, the medicine and spirituality movement is attempting to bring religion and spirituality back into medicine. It is doing so under a biopsychosociospiritual model. I unpack one model for allowing religion back into medicine called the RCOPE. (...)
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  35.  6
    Family Medicine’s Waltz With Systems.Raymond Downing - 2012 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 32 (4):269-272.
    Family Medicine first formally confronted systems thinking with the adoption of the biopsychosocial model for understanding disease in a holistic manner; this is a description of a natural system. More recently, Family Medicine has been consciously engaged in developing itself as a system for delivering health care, an artificial system. We make this new system available to all people, whether sick or well, offering to manage not just their diseases, but their lives. However, a major difference between (...)
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  36.  4
    Diderot's Holism: Philosophical Anti-reductionism and Its Medical Background.Timo Kaitaro - 1997 - Peter Lang Publishing.
  37.  7
    Philosophy and medicine.Erich Kurt Ledermann - 1970 - Philadelphia,: J. B. Lippincott.
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  38. Holistic Methodology and Pseudoscience.D. Radner & M. Radner - 1989 - In Douglas Stalker & Clark Glymour (eds.), Examining Holistic Medicine. Prometheus Books. pp. 149--159.
  39. Medicine’s metaphysical morass: how confusion about dualism threatens public health.Diane O’Leary - 2020 - Synthese 2020 (December):1977-2005.
    What position on dualism does medicine require? Our understanding of that ques- tion has been dictated by holism, as defined by the biopsychosocial model, since the late twentieth century. Unfortunately, holism was characterized at the start with con- fused definitions of ‘dualism’ and ‘reductionism’, and that problem has led to a deep, unrecognized conceptual split in the medical professions. Some insist that holism is a nonreductionist approach that aligns with some form of dualism, while others insist it’s a reductionist (...)
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  40.  7
    The Clinical Christ: Scientific and spiritual reflections on the transformative psychology called Christian holism.Charles L. Zeiders - 2004 - Birdsbro, PA: Julian's House.
    Psychologists can measure normalcy, define madness, develop therapeutic paradigms, and list the nuances of human behavior with utmost precision. We have biofeedback, psychometrics, psychoanalysis, cognitive therapy, positive psychology, behavior modification, and a host of deeply promising projects in the research and development pipeline. To be sure, our discipline has advanced accurate understanding of the soul's essential properties and has scientifically harnessed this knowledge to clinically mitigate the deep agony of the human mind. But, despite our advances and genuine effectiveness, our (...)
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  41.  61
    Classical medicine v alternative medical practices.M. H. Kottow - 1992 - Journal of Medical Ethics 18 (1):18-22.
    Classical medicine operates in a climate of rational discourse, scientific knowledge accretion and the acceptance of ethical standards that regulate its activities. Criticism has centred on the excessive technological emphasis of modern medicine and on its social strategy aimed at defending exclusiveness and the privileges of professional status. Alternative therapeutic approaches have taken advantage of the eroded public image of medicine, offering treatments based on holistic philosophies that stress the non-rational, non-technical and non-scientific approach to the (...)
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  42.  5
    Medicine as biology: Neuropsychiatry at the University of Chicago, 1928–1939.Bonnie Ellen Blustein - 1993 - Perspectives on Science 1 (3):416-444.
    When the University of Chicago opened its four-year medical program in 1929, the medical departments were established on the same footing as other biological departments. One of the first priorities was to build a department of psychiatry based on an interdisciplinary and holistic research program with important social implications. This plan was soon frustrated by structural factors and conflicts of interest both internal and external to the university. The story illuminates crucial dilemmas of neuropsychiatry in the interwar years and (...)
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  43.  41
    Medicine in the Thought and Action of the Emperor Julian.Jeremy J. Swist - 2018 - International Journal of the Platonic Tradition 12 (1):13-38.
    _ Source: _Volume 12, Issue 1, pp 13 - 38 This paper assembles evidence from the full scope of Julian’s writings that the emperor had a pronounced interest in medicine and human health, which impacted both his rhetorical and real approach to political, philosophical, and religious problems. His initiatives aimed to promote doctors, medical research, and public health. He emphasized a holistic view of bodily and spiritual health in his version of theurgic Neoplatonism. Medical frames of reference also (...)
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  44.  44
    A theory of holism for nursing.Simon Woods - 1998 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 1 (3):255-261.
    In this paper it is argued that nurses should be holists whilst at the same time accepting that ‘holism’ is a contentious concept. One of the problems for a supporter of holism is that of which holism -- an attempt to outline the version of holism advocated is made by identifying only two versions of holism: The Strong theory and the Pragmatic theory of holism. By introducing this device it is hoped to avoid, if only by stipulation, some of the (...)
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  45.  30
    The holistic claims of the biopsychosocial conception of who's international classification of functioning, disability, and health (icf): A conceptual analysis on the basis of a pluralistic-holistic ontology and multidimensional view of the human being (vol 37, pg 277, 2012). [REVIEW]Hans Magnus Solli & Antonio Barbosa Da Silva - 2012 - Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 37 (5):277-294.
    The International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF), designed by the WHO, attempts to provide a holistic model of functioning and disability by integrating a medical model with a social one. The aim of this article is to analyze the ICF’s claim to holism. The following components of the ICF’s complexity are analyzed: (1) health condition, (2) body functions and structures, (3) activity, (4) participation, (5) environmental factors, (6) personal factors, and (7) health. Although the ICF claims to (...)
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  46.  24
    A theory of holism for nursing.Simon Woods - 1998 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 1 (3):255-261.
    In this paper it is argued that nurses should be holists whilst at the same time accepting that ‘holism’ is a contentious concept. One of the problems for a supporter of holism is that of which holism -- an attempt to outline the version of holism advocated is made by identifying only two versions of holism: The Strong theory and the Pragmatic theory of holism. By introducing this device it is hoped to avoid, if only by stipulation, some of the (...)
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  47.  65
    Integral medicine and health.Jean A. Hamilton, Kelley L. Phillips & Arlene Green - 2004 - World Futures 60 (4):295 – 302.
    Integral Science provides the empirical rigor needed to shift medicine's worldview. The shift in science will give rise to Integral Medicine, which will emerge from the integration and transformational change of biomedicine, psychosocial approaches, Complementary and Alternative Medicine, and other reform movements. The root metaphor of Integral Medicine is a healthy and sustainable ecosystem. At its heart are mind-body holism and collaborative learning. Healing and the creation of health will emphasize educational, self-care, and community support models. (...)
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  48.  22
    Value-laden knowledge and holistic thinking in agricultural research.Donald M. Vietor & Harry T. Cralle - 1992 - Agriculture and Human Values 9 (3):44-57.
    Critics have challenged agricultural scientists to address concerns for environmental quality, farm size and structure, international justice, and the health and welfare of consumers and farm labor in research planning. The goal of this research was to determine what is and what could be done to consider value-laden knowledge relevant to these concerns in research planning. Descriptions of a state agricultural experiment station and of a hierarchy of inquiry that included applied systems analysis and reductionist approaches to science revealed the (...)
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  49.  10
    Medicine-Based Values?Åge Wifstad - 2008 - Philosophy, Psychiatry, and Psychology 15 (2):179-182.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Medicine-Based Values?Åge Wifstad (bio)KeywordsEthics committees, judgment, common moralityToulmin's DiagnosisIn his classical article with the unforgettable title "How medicine saved the life of ethics" (Toulmin 1982), Stephen Toulmin claims that medicine saved ethics by giving the philosophers a positive reality check through medical challenges: (1) Ethics in medicine is a serious topic, not just something to discuss at seminars. If, for example, both A and B (...)
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  50.  5
    Reconciling Reductionistic and Holistic Theories of Health with Weak Emergence.William E. Stempsey - 2018 - Proceedings of the XXIII World Congress of Philosophy 20:29-33.
    The nature of health is one of the central topics in the philosophy of medicine. The concept of health is complex because it comprises multiple features and there is no consensus on which feature is most basic or even whether some particular feature has any importance at all. This paper focuses on how several basic elements play a role in the formation of the concept of health. My central claim is that the theory of emergence offers a way to (...)
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