Metodo

International Studies in Phenomenology and Philosophy

Book | Chapter

190098

Epilogue

Josef Seifert

pp. 349-353

Abstract

First, I distinguished and analyzed three parts of the general nature of medicine: (1) medicine as science (the type of scientific knowledge medical practice requires and is based on); (2) medicine as practical and technical art, as best exemplified in surgery; and (3) medicine (the medical professions) as entailing knowledge of, and moral commitment to, the end of medicine, of which Aristotle recognized so insightfully that it is constitutive of the essence of medicine. (The present work sought to overcome the all too narrow concept and definition of the end of medicine in terms of health alone, showing that that there are at least five immanent and two transcendent goods medicine ought to serve as its proper ends.)

Publication details

Published in:

Seifert Josef (2004) The philosophical diseases of medicine and their cure I: philosophy and ethics of medicine: foundations. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 349-353

DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4020-2871-7_7

Full citation:

Seifert Josef (2004) Epilogue, In: The philosophical diseases of medicine and their cure I, Dordrecht, Springer, 349–353.