Centre for Medical Humanities, Durham University, Trevelyan College, Durham, UK.
J Eval Clin Pract. 2011 Oct;17(5):927-32. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2753.2011.01728.x. Epub 2011 Aug 18.
Medicine is predicated on a view of human nature that is highly positivist and atomistic. This is apparent in the way in which its students are taught, clinical consultations are structured and medical evidence is generated. The field of medical humanities originally emerged as a challenge to this overly narrow view, but it has rarely progressed beyond tinkering around the edges of medical education. This is partly because its practitioners have largely been working from within a pervasive medical culture from which it is difficult to break free, and partly because the field has been insufficiently armed with scholarly thinking from the humanities. This is beginning to change and there is a sign that research in medical humanities has the potential to mount a persuasive challenge to medicine's ways of teaching, working and finding out. This article problematizes medicine's narrow viewpoint, grounding its critique in philosophical ideas from phenomenology and pragmatism. I will reflect upon the historical context within which medical humanities has emerged and briefly examine specific examples of how its interdisciplinary approach, involving humanities scholars with clinicians and medical scientists, may develop new research directions in medicine.
医学基于一种高度实证主义和原子论的人性观。这在医学学生的教学方式、临床咨询的结构和医学证据的生成方式中都显而易见。医学人文学科最初是作为对这种过于狭隘观点的挑战而出现的,但它很少能够在医学教育的边缘进行修补。部分原因是其从业者主要是在一种普遍存在的医学文化中工作,很难从中挣脱出来,部分原因是该领域没有从人文学科中获得足够的学术思想武装。这种情况正在开始改变,有迹象表明,医学人文学科的研究有可能对医学的教学、工作和发现方式提出有力的挑战。本文对医学的狭隘观点进行了探讨,将其批判建立在现象学和实用主义的哲学思想之上。我将反思医学人文学科出现的历史背景,并简要考察其跨学科方法的具体例子,该方法涉及人文科学学者与临床医生和医学科学家合作,可能会为医学研究开辟新的方向。