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Foucaults militære metaforer: Livet som erfaring og vitenskap
In: Sosiologisk tidsskrift: journal of sociology, Band 18, Heft 3, S. 203-226
ISSN: 1504-2928
Roger Livet — Les nouveaux visages de l'agriculture française
In: Population: revue bimestrielle de l'Institut National d'Etudes Démographiques. French edition, Band 36, Heft 3, S. 647-648
ISSN: 0718-6568, 1957-7966
"Thi Livet er stærkere end loven...": Danmarks moderne aborthistorie
In: University of Southern Denmark Studie in History and Social Sciences 494
Klimaendringer i norsk arktis: Konsekvenser for livet i nord
In: Rapportserie 136
Anmeldelse af Livet i Magtens Rugekasse. Fortalt gennem fem generationer
In: Politica, Band 53, Heft 1, S. 86-91
ISSN: 2246-042X
Poul Erik Mouritzen (red.), Livet i Magtens Rugekasse. Fortalt gennem fem generationer. Aarhus: Politica, 2020, 220 sider, 199 kr.
Anmeldelse af Livet i Magtens Rugekasse. Fortalt gennem fem generationer
In: Politica, Band 52, Heft 4
ISSN: 2246-042X
Poul Erik Mouritzen (red.), Livet i Magtens Rugekasse. Fortalt gennem fem generationer. Aarhus: Politica, 2020, 220 sider, 199 kr. (anmeldt af Jens Peter Christensen)
Leda vid livet: fyra mikrohistoriska essäer om självmordets historia
In: Lagerbringbiblioteket [3]
Varmt og klokt om verdighet i livets siste fase
In: Tidsskrift for omsorgsforskning, Band 1, Heft 1, S. 81-82
ISSN: 2387-5984
Om livets kunst: en vitalistisk læsning af medicinsk humanisme
In: Tidsskrift for Forskning i Sygdom og Samfund: tidsskrift for idéhistorie, Band 9, Heft 17
ISSN: 1904-7975
In a seminal and much-cited paper, Rita Charon has described narrative medicine - and, more broadly, the opening of medicine to education in the humanities - in terms of a mission to develop skills of empathy, reflection, professionalism and communication. In this paper I propose that Canguilhem's concept of vitalism and Alfred North Whitehead's concept of the 'art of life' provide a lens through which we can read the propositions of narrative medicine and medical humanities in the context of a much broader historico-scientific problematic, and connect them with a wider set of ethical and political implications. After setting out the relevant concepts by drawing on Canguilhem and Whitehead's work, in the latter part of the paper I explore the ethico-political question of how medicine might best serve the perfectibility of human beings, or the 'art of life'. I do this via a historical excursus, by revisiting a debate between Viktor Von Weizsäcker and Karl Jaspers on the merits and dangers of the 'introduction of the subject within medicine'. In their different historical context, Weizsäcker and Jaspers were able to articulate questions that remain relevant today, and that are implicit in the propositions of narrative medicine.