“Mad” Disease, Martian Diseases, and Modernism
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.4454/mefisto.9-1.1420Keywords:
Biostatistical Theory, Disease, Harmful Dysfunction Theory, Modernism, Social ConstructivismAbstract
Debates about the Disease Concept have largely reached a point of stalemate between two dominant positions, the Biostatistical (BST) and Harmful Dysfunction (HDT) theories. I provide a new characterisation of those positions, and the stalemate between them, focussing on the respective theories of biological function that they employ. In that light, I elaborate some motivations for adopting Social Constructivism as an alternative, and go on to propose a “rebranding” of Social Constructivism as a form of modernism, with the same basic concerns as the literary and artistic movement of that name. I describe two distinct conceptual “stages” of the debate. The first is the familiar trade in problem-cases and counter-examples, resulting in the familiar stasis of mature philosophical debates. But two later, well-known arguments in the debate represent – I argue – a conceptually new stage, in which it becomes doubtful that either BST or HDT can even in principle characterise the disease concept accurately.
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