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  1. Specialists without spirit: Limitations of the mechanistic biomedical model.Soma Hewa & Robert W. Hetherington - 1995 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 16 (2).
    This paper examines the origin and the development of the mechanistic model of the human body and health in terms of Max Weber's theory of rationalization. It is argued that the development of Western scientific medicine is a part of the broad process of rationalization that began in sixteenth century Europe as a result of the Reformation. The development of the mechanistic view of the human body in Western medicine is consistent with the ideas of calculability, predictability, and control — (...)
     
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    The protestant ethic and Rockefeller benevolence: The religious impulse in american philanthropy.Soma Hewa - 1997 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 27 (4):419–452.
    This paper is an application of Max Weber’s thesis about the “elective affinity” between Protestant religious impulses and the rise of capitalism, and rationalization of benevolence. Exploring the history of organized philanthropy in the United States, using the life and work of John D. Rockefeller, the paper presents the power of the religious motive in Rockefeller’s commitment to philanthropy, especially towards support for scientific university based research in medicine. Presenting historical evidence, the paper argues against those who see U.S. philanthropists (...)
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    Medical technology: A pandora's box? [REVIEW]Soma Hewa - 1994 - Journal of Medical Humanities 15 (3):171-181.
    This paper examines the development of medical technology in terms of Max Weber's theory of rationalization. It argues that medical technology is a part of the general process of social, political and economic changes in modern Western societies. Medical technology today keeps many people alive who, in the past, would have died from their illness. In recent years, burgeoning technological achievements in medicine have been regarded as a threat to the individual's freedom to die. Many people believe that the prolongation (...)
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