Burger W
Medical Faculty, Humboldt-University Berlin, Germany.
Med Health Care Philos. 2001;4(1):79-84. doi: 10.1023/a:1009926101027.
Thinking in medicine is still dominated by the cartesian view of science of the past centuries, dividing individuals into the reasoning mind (res cogitans) and an objective body as part of all non-subjective things of the world (res extensa). This classical scientific paradigm does not take into account the influence the observer exerts on the observed phenomena. Applying this paradigm to medical research and education has consequences regarding the relationship between physicians and patients as well as between medical teachers and their students. An improvement of medical education towards a broader understanding of complex illnesses with their psychosocial implications must be based on philosophical and epistemological issues. The requirements of modern medicine cannot just be met by adding more psycho-social content to somatic medical education or by changing the didactic approach without reflection on the underlying concepts and the relation of the human being to his world.