ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1987, this book is about the classification of bodily conditions into diseases. It provides a full account of the concept of disease, examining the issue of whether disease status is something we discover or invent and the issue of whether disease attributions involve implicit value judgements. It investigates whether bodily conditions fall into natural kinds and whether these debates can be settled by discovering whether there are any natural boundaries dividing conditions into diseases and non-diseases. It considers whether the notion of disease is an evaluative notion or whether judgements about disease status are purely descriptive. The issue of whether other cultures with different values are justified in making different disease judgements is also discussed.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Medicine and The Need for Philosophy

chapter Chapter 1|13 pages

Invention Or Discovery?

chapter Chapter 2|22 pages

Taxonomic Realism 1

Natural Kinds

chapter Chapter 3|15 pages

Taxonomic Realism 2

Semantics

chapter Chapter 4|17 pages

The Nature of Disease

chapter Chapter 5|18 pages

The Normal and The Pathological

chapter Chapter 6|22 pages

The Concept of Function

chapter Chapter 7|14 pages

The Naturalist Theory

chapter Chapter 8|20 pages

The Concept of Harm

chapter Chapter 9|18 pages

The Normativist Theory

chapter Chapter 10|18 pages

Disease Entities as Natural Kinds

chapter Chapter 11|18 pages

The Semantics of Disease Terms

chapter |6 pages

Conclusion

When is A Disease not A Disease?