Switch to: Citations

Add references

You must login to add references.
  1. Health at the Center of Health Systems Reform: How Philosophy Can Inform Policy.Joachim P. Sturmberg, Carmel M. Martin & Mark M. Moes - 2010 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 53 (3):341-356.
    We are never illness or disease, but, rather, always their sum in the world of day-to-day experience. Disease and illness are not closed systems, but mutually constitutive and continuously interacting worlds. In the patient’s case it is always experience as well. Pain, sickness and death help make that particular experienced identity unavoidable, and at some level ultimately inaccessible to medicine’s changing understanding of disease and tools for managing it. Health—rather than cost containment, specific conditions, or technologies—should be the central focus (...)
    Direct download (5 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   12 citations  
  • Metaphors We Live by.Max Black - 1980 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 40 (2):208-210.
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   702 citations  
  • Metaphors, models and organisational ethics in health care.J. McCrickerd - 2000 - Journal of Medical Ethics 26 (5):340-345.
    Crucial to discussions in organisational ethics is an evaluation of the metaphors and models we use to understand the organisations we are discussing. I briefly defend this contention and evaluate three possible models: the current corporate model, an orchestrator model which puts hospitals in the same class as malls and airports, and a community model. I argue that the corporate and orchestrator model push to the background some important organisational ethics issues and bias us inappropriately towards certain solutions. Furthermore, I (...)
    Direct download (7 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   7 citations  
  • Medicine and Music: Three Relations Considered. [REVIEW]H. M. Evans - 2007 - Journal of Medical Humanities 28 (3):135-148.
    Two well-recognised, but inherently reductionist, relations between medicine and music are the attempted neuro-scientific understanding of responses to music and interest in music’s contributions to clinical therapy. This paper proposes a third relation whereby music is seen as an organising metaphor for clinical medicine as a practice. Both music and clinical medicine affirm human well-being, and both do this inter alia through varieties of skilful, crafted yet spontaneous mutual engagement between a ‘performer’ and an ‘audience’. I argue that this organising (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   4 citations  
  • Metaphors We Live By.George Lakoff & Mark Johnson - 1980 - Ethics 93 (3):619-621.
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1308 citations