Book for review: i "Philosophy of Care - New Approaches to Vulnerability, Otherness and Therapy"
Among the questions that research might answer regards Hodges' model I have in mind:
- At what age can Hodges' model be introduced in the general curriculum?
- Is there consistency in how people view/interpret and apply Hodges' model?
- How simple is it (or complex)?
- Is it a meta-model?
- How can Hodges' model relate to the spiritual?
"Finally, the fifth part – Care and Therapy – examines issues relevant to medicalcare. This volume would be remiss if it did not take therapeutic care into account.Practical and theoretical knowledge mutually influence each other. This highly specializeddomain imparts a significant amount of the status that care is given in ourdaily lives. Thus, in this last part, the previous themes of otherness and ipseity convergesystematically. Through the theoretical emphasis that is placed on the issue ofsuffering – whether it concerns physical illnesses or those of the psychological andpsychiatric realm – the authors of these chapters show us the urgency of thinkingabout therapeutic care practices in the light of a theory of intersubjectivity, wherethe disease itself and its cure are understood within the communication processesand not only as exclusively technical-scientific processes." p.vii. (Introduction).
"(a) care is contextual and anti-essentialist... The characterization of care requires a great deal of attention to the precise details of each situation (Tronto, 2012: 35).""(b) care is relational and accepts that human beings , other beings, and the environment are interdependent (Tronto, 2012: 32).""(c) In human societies which would like to assume the equal value of all human life, care needs to be democratic and inclusive (Tronto, 2012: 36)." p.6.
"Giving through care involves much more than what is described in the interactional framework of exchanges characteristic of homo economicus (economical animal) paradigm. Giving is not exchanging because care involves so much more than just the provision of a service. Care, as understood as a politically relevant anthropological position, is thus very different from a Hobbes-inspired anthropology which supposes a social epistemology based on a an atomistic approach to individuals. It provides a fundamental interpretation of our social intelligence by thinking it, starting from a relational anthropology within which the concept of vulnerability plays, as we will see, a strategic role. A pathetics of care rethinks the balance between reason and feeling, argument and emotion in the spirit of the tradition of Scottish philosophy, in order to allow a "different voice" to be heard in the analysis, the description, and the support of the human world." p.7.
contextual anti-essentialist relational situated | context human being, other being and environment - interdependent |
context interdependence care in human societies equality within human societies | context situated human societies are democratic and inclusive |
See also:
body & soul - Book: Philosophy of care: New approaches to vulnerability, otherness therapy