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Towards A Biological Towards A Biological Perspective Perspective On Disease On Disease For a full transcript of the presentation, for which these slides were an accompaniment, please visit: https://sites.google.com/site/sjlewis55/presentations/brow nbag2005

Towards a biological perspective on disease

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Page 1: Towards a biological perspective on disease

Towards A Biological PerspectiveTowards A Biological PerspectiveOn DiseaseOn Disease

For a full transcript of the presentation,for which these slides were an accompaniment,

please visit:

https://sites.google.com/site/sjlewis55/presentations/brownbag2005

Page 2: Towards a biological perspective on disease

Which is, and which is not, a ‘disease’?And why?

Page 3: Towards a biological perspective on disease

‘My research is concerned with exploring the biological and philosophical aspects of the concepts of disease and health and considering the uses and applications of these findings.’

Page 4: Towards a biological perspective on disease

Towards a BiologicalPerspective on Disease

Stephen Lewis

Page 5: Towards a biological perspective on disease

‘The point of philosophy is to start with something so simple as not to seem worth stating, and to end with something so paradoxical that no one will believe it.’

Bertrand Russell

Page 6: Towards a biological perspective on disease

‘[P]hilosophy is often a matter of finding a suitable context in which to say the obvious.’

Iris Murdoch (1970)

Page 7: Towards a biological perspective on disease

‘[I]f we want to learn anything really deep, we have to study it not in its 'normal', regular form, but in its critical state, in fever, in passion. If you want to know the normal healthy body, study it when it is abnormal, when it is ill.’

Imre Lakatos (Proofs and Refutations, 1976)

Page 8: Towards a biological perspective on disease

'Central to the enterprises of both philosophy and medicine are the images and ideas held about what man is and what his existence signifies for himself and the world …

… medicine and biology are two powerful instruments of scrutiny of the image of man. Together with philosophy, they can help contemporary man to understand a little more about what he is …’

(Editorial. (Edward Pellegrino) J. Med. Phil. 1976)

Page 9: Towards a biological perspective on disease

Which is, and which is not, a ‘disease’?And why?

Page 10: Towards a biological perspective on disease

Gall stones (Acute-on-Chronic Cholecystitis)

Page 11: Towards a biological perspective on disease

(Lobar) Pneumonia

Page 12: Towards a biological perspective on disease
Page 13: Towards a biological perspective on disease
Page 14: Towards a biological perspective on disease

‘Sickness ... is the external and public mode of unhealth. Sickness is a social role, a status, a negotiated position in the world, a bargain struck between the person henceforward called 'sick', and a society which is prepared to recognise and sustain him.’

Marshall Marinker, 1975

Page 15: Towards a biological perspective on disease
Page 16: Towards a biological perspective on disease

‘Illness ... is a feeling, an experience of unhealth which is entirely personal, interior to the person of the patient.

Often [illness] accompanies disease, but the disease may be undeclared, as in the early stages of cancer or tuberculosis or diabetes. Sometimes illness exists where no disease can be found.'

Marshall Marinker, 1975

Page 17: Towards a biological perspective on disease

‘Disease ... is a pathological process, most often physical as in throat infection, or cancer of the bronchus, sometimes undetermined in origin, as in schizophrenia … There is an objectivity about disease which doctors are able to see, touch, measure, smell.’

Marshall Marinker, 1975

Page 18: Towards a biological perspective on disease

Giovanni Battista Morgagni(1682-1771)

De Sedibus et Causis Morborum per Anatomen Indagatis – 1761[On the Seats and Causes of Disease Investigated by Anatomy]

NOT sites

Page 19: Towards a biological perspective on disease
Page 20: Towards a biological perspective on disease

- Effects of the presence of the ‘seat’

- ‘Seat’ of disease

Page 21: Towards a biological perspective on disease

Self-Awareness

Anatomy &Physiology

OverallBiologicalState

Page 22: Towards a biological perspective on disease

Orange

R – 240

G – 40

B – 10

Page 23: Towards a biological perspective on disease

OverallBiologicalState

Anatomy &Physiology

Self-Awareness

Disturbance

Disease

Illness

Pathological

Page 24: Towards a biological perspective on disease

No illness

NoPathology

Health

Page 25: Towards a biological perspective on disease

R - 245B - 45G - 5

R - 240B - 35G - 5

R - 235B - 35G - 5

R - 245B - 45G - 10

R - 240B - 40G - 10

R - 235B - 35G - 10

R - 245B - 45G - 15

R - 240B - 45G - 15

R - 235B - 35G - 15

Page 26: Towards a biological perspective on disease

Which is, and which is not, a ‘disease’?And why?

Page 27: Towards a biological perspective on disease
Page 28: Towards a biological perspective on disease

• Why these particular responses?• Why the differences?• Why the similarities?• What are the consequences for the organism?

Response to stimulus ‘X’

Response to stimulus ‘Y’

Page 29: Towards a biological perspective on disease

‘Darwinian medicine is the enterprise of trying to find evolutionary explanations for vulnerabilities to disease …

Disease, [is] not … a product of [natural] selection.’

Randolph Nesse

Page 30: Towards a biological perspective on disease

‘The meaning of a word is its use.’

Ludwig Wittgenstein

Page 31: Towards a biological perspective on disease
Page 32: Towards a biological perspective on disease

Towards A Biological PerspectiveTowards A Biological PerspectiveOn DiseaseOn Disease

For a full transcript of the presentation,for which these slides were an accompaniment,

please visit:

https://sites.google.com/site/sjlewis55/presentations/brownbag2005