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Health is weird. Health is weird in a way that resists simple explanations or elegant theorizing. This book is a philosophical explanation of that weirdness, and an argument that grappling with the distinctive weirdness of health can give us insight into how we might approach difficult questions about social reality. After examining extant theories of health - and finding them lacking - the book explores some particularly intractable puzzles about the nature of health, places where we often feel pulled in multiple directions or have reason to say conflicting things. On the basis of these puzzles, the book then defends a stance called ameliorative skepticism. Although health is real, there is, on this view, no way of giving a coherent, explanatorily adequate answer to the question “what is health?” Yet adopting this skeptical stance can, it is argued, help us to better understand the role that health plays in our lives, and the work that we need a theory of health to do.
Elizabeth Barnes is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Virginia. She works on social and feminist philosophy, metaphysics, and ethics, and is especially interested in the areas where these topics overlap. Her book The Minority Body explores the connection between disability and wellbeing, and she's also written on indeterminacy, social construction, and gender.
ForwardIntroduction1: Theories of Health2: Health and Wellbeing3: Health, Subjectivity, and Capability4: Health and Disability5: Ameliorative Skepticism and the Nature of Health6: Ameliorative Skepticism, Shifting Standards, and the Measure of HealthAfterwardBibliography
This excellent, well-written book will be appreciated by biomedical scholars, philosophers, social and political scientists, and perhaps some theoretically savvy health care professionals. Recommended. Graduate students, faculty, and professionals.