Perspect Biol Med. 2020;63(4):695-707. doi: 10.1353/pbm.2020.0056.
The essay explores how Simon Critchley's critique of philosophy and understanding of tragedy might affect bioethics and health-care practice. What I playfully call the Critchley Doctrine begins with a rejection of philosophy's aspiration to a non-contradictory life and its premise that humans act on rational deliberation. This rejection opens us to a recognition of the uncontainable that is expressed in tragedy, and that speaks to what is inexplicable about the suffering of illness. Critchley advocates an ethics of heteronomy or hetero-affectivity rather than autonomy, but his version is distinguished by its recognition of how crushing the demands of the other can be. Tragedy and humor offer what he calls aesthetic reparation. A tragic medicine balances grieving with humor and seeks above all honesty in communication.
这篇文章探讨了西蒙·克里奇利(Simon Critchley)对哲学的批判以及他对悲剧的理解如何影响生物伦理学和医疗保健实践。我戏称这种影响为“克里奇利学说”,它始于对哲学追求无矛盾生活的愿望以及人类基于理性思考而行动的前提的否定。这种否定使我们认识到悲剧中所表达的不可遏制的力量,以及疾病痛苦中无法解释的部分。克里奇利提倡一种他称之为他治伦理或他者情感的伦理学,而不是自主性伦理学,但他的观点的独特之处在于认识到他人的要求可能是多么具有压迫性。悲剧和幽默提供了他所谓的审美补偿。一种悲剧性的医学用幽默平衡悲伤,并在交流中寻求诚实。