TY - CHAP
T1 - Epistemic Inclusion and the Silence of the Patients
AU - Zwart, Hub
N1 - © The Author(s) 2024.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - In The Birth of the Clinic, Michel Foucault (1963) practiced historical epistemology, combining two scholarly crafts, history of medicine and philosophy of science. With his philosophical hammer and stethoscope, he assessed epistemic configurations: landscapes of discourse and practice. Philosophical readers are intrigued by the epistemological ruptures he discerned, the sudden upheavals in the ways in which physicians observed, treated, looked at, listened to, and wrote about their patients. Foucault was an “archaeologist”, signalling the sudden emergence and disappearance of “discursive formations”, pointing to abrupt and remarkable changes in the ways in which phenomena are described, analysed, and categorised. (Foucault 1969). For an archaeologist, all (anonymous) potsherds and coins stemming from a particular formation (or discursive layer) share a number of basic similarities: they were all produced in a similar vein. Likewise, within a particular discursive formation, all texts are basically similar. And although author names are mentioned by Foucault, the author’s identity does not really count. Foucault is interested in the basic logic at work, anonymously almost. Notwithstanding the countless discussions and debates between authors, a spontaneous unanimity can be discerned, concerning basic presuppositions that remain unquestioned. At the same time, there are striking differences between discursive formations (between layers within libraries). Historians tend to be critical about this approach. Add more detail, and the epistemic fault lines become increasingly diffuse,—the theorem of epistemic discontinuity becomes difficult to uphold.
AB - In The Birth of the Clinic, Michel Foucault (1963) practiced historical epistemology, combining two scholarly crafts, history of medicine and philosophy of science. With his philosophical hammer and stethoscope, he assessed epistemic configurations: landscapes of discourse and practice. Philosophical readers are intrigued by the epistemological ruptures he discerned, the sudden upheavals in the ways in which physicians observed, treated, looked at, listened to, and wrote about their patients. Foucault was an “archaeologist”, signalling the sudden emergence and disappearance of “discursive formations”, pointing to abrupt and remarkable changes in the ways in which phenomena are described, analysed, and categorised. (Foucault 1969). For an archaeologist, all (anonymous) potsherds and coins stemming from a particular formation (or discursive layer) share a number of basic similarities: they were all produced in a similar vein. Likewise, within a particular discursive formation, all texts are basically similar. And although author names are mentioned by Foucault, the author’s identity does not really count. Foucault is interested in the basic logic at work, anonymously almost. Notwithstanding the countless discussions and debates between authors, a spontaneous unanimity can be discerned, concerning basic presuppositions that remain unquestioned. At the same time, there are striking differences between discursive formations (between layers within libraries). Historians tend to be critical about this approach. Add more detail, and the epistemic fault lines become increasingly diffuse,—the theorem of epistemic discontinuity becomes difficult to uphold.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85202017044&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/978-3-031-62241-0_4
DO - 10.1007/978-3-031-62241-0_4
M3 - Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:85202017044
SN - 978-3-031-62240-3
SN - 978-3-031-62243-4
T3 - Philosophy and Medicine
SP - 51
EP - 56
BT - A Pragmatic Approach to Conceptualization of Health and Disease
A2 - , Maartje Schermer, Nicholas Binney
PB - Springer Science+Business Media
ER -