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Contents: Prologue: A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Trials; Or Why I Digress Part One: Against the Norm 1. Embodying the Englishman 2. Taking Sex in Hand 3. Social Dis-Ease Part Two: Pressing Issues 4. Legislating the Norm 5. Typing Wilde 6. Disposing the Body Epilogue: What's in a Name?
First published in 1993. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
As an emerging discipline, data science broadly means different
things across different areas. Exploring the relationship of data
science with statistics, a well-established and principled
data-analytic discipline, this book provides insights about
commonalities in approach, and differences in emphasis.Featuring
chapters from established authors in both disciplines, the book
also presents a number of applications and accompanying papers.
At thirteen, Ed Cohen was diagnosed with Crohn's disease-a chronic,
incurable condition that nearly killed him in his early twenties.
At his diagnosis, his doctors told him that the best he could hope
for would be periods of remission. Unfortunately, doctors never
mentioned healing as a possibility. In On Learning to Heal, Cohen
draws on fifty years of living with Crohn's to consider how Western
medicine's turn from an "art of healing" toward a "science of
medicine" deeply affects both medical practitioners and their
patients. He demonstrates that although medicine can now offer many
seemingly miraculous therapies, medicine is not and has never been
the only way to enhance healing. Exploring his own path to healing,
he argues that learning to heal requires us to desire and value
healing as a vital possibility. With this book, Cohen advocates
reviving healing's role for all those whose lives are touched by
illness.
At thirteen, Ed Cohen was diagnosed with Crohn's disease-a chronic,
incurable condition that nearly killed him in his early twenties.
At his diagnosis, his doctors told him that the best he could hope
for would be periods of remission. Unfortunately, doctors never
mentioned healing as a possibility. In On Learning to Heal, Cohen
draws on fifty years of living with Crohn's to consider how Western
medicine's turn from an "art of healing" toward a "science of
medicine" deeply affects both medical practitioners and their
patients. He demonstrates that although medicine can now offer many
seemingly miraculous therapies, medicine is not and has never been
the only way to enhance healing. Exploring his own path to healing,
he argues that learning to heal requires us to desire and value
healing as a vital possibility. With this book, Cohen advocates
reviving healing's role for all those whose lives are touched by
illness.
This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book
may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages,
poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the
original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We
believe this work is culturally important, and despite the
imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of
our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works
worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in
the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.
Biological immunity as we know it does not exist until the late
nineteenth century. Nor does the premise that organisms defend
themselves at the cellular or molecular levels. For nearly two
thousand years "immunity," a legal concept invented in ancient
Rome, serves almost exclusively political and juridical ends.
"Self-defense" also originates in a juridico-political context; it
emerges in the mid-seventeenth century, during the English Civil
War, when Thomas Hobbes defines it as the first "natural right." In
the 1880s and 1890s, biomedicine fuses these two political precepts
into one, creating a new vital function, "immunity-as-defense." In
"A Body Worth Defending," Ed Cohen reveals the unacknowledged
political, economic, and philosophical assumptions about the human
body that biomedicine incorporates when it recruits immunity to
safeguard the vulnerable living organism.
Inspired by Michel Foucault's writings about biopolitics and
biopower, Cohen traces the migration of immunity from politics and
law into the domains of medicine and science. Offering a genealogy
of the concept, he illuminates a complex of thinking about modern
bodies that percolates through European political, legal,
philosophical, economic, governmental, scientific, and medical
discourses from the mid-seventeenth century through the twentieth.
He shows that by the late nineteenth century, "the body" literally
incarnates modern notions of personhood. In this lively cultural
rumination, Cohen argues that by embracing the idea of
immunity-as-defense so exclusively, biomedicine naturalizes the
individual as the privileged focus for identifying and treating
illness, thereby devaluing or obscuring approaches to healing
situated within communities or collectives.
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