Cristin-resultat-ID: 402168
Sist endret: 21. oktober 2013, 12:13
Resultat
Vitenskapelig artikkel
2001

Gjør kunnskap vondt?

Bidragsytere:
  • Roger Strand og
  • Edvin Schei

Tidsskrift

Tidsskrift for Den norske legeforening
ISSN 0029-2001
e-ISSN 0807-7096
NVI-nivå 1

Om resultatet

Vitenskapelig artikkel
Publiseringsår: 2001
Volum: 121
Hefte: 12
Sider: 1502 - 1506
Open Access

Importkilder

Fdok-ID: 10467

Beskrivelse Beskrivelse

Tittel

Gjør kunnskap vondt?

Sammendrag

The rate of production of medical knowledge is high and increasing, and medical practitioners find it hard to keep up. Still, production of new knowledge is normally considered to be unambiguously desirable. This paper is a philosophical reflection upon this assumption of desirability. It is noted that the health sector appears to be subject to the law of diminishing returns; this implies that more doctors and more medical technology may at some level do more harm than good. We argue that Bacon’s legitimization of knowledge (knowledge is power) is less forceful in the face of biological and psychosomatic complexity. Medical research may lead to unintended harm through at least two mechanisms. First, biomedical knowledge is reified through the introduction of new medical technology whose effects are not fully known, and may lead to uncontrollable adverse effects on a clinical and societal level. Second,exaggerated attention paid to the production and implementation of biomedical factual knowledge may prevent the development and teaching of personal clinical skills, including phronesis, the individual judgemental powers that enable us to judge which goals are worth striving for, and which are not.

Bidragsytere

Roger Strand

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved Senter for vitenskapsteori ved Universitetet i Bergen

Edvin Schei

  • Tilknyttet:
    Forfatter
    ved Institutt for samfunnsmedisinske fag ved Universitetet i Bergen
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