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" Clinical Judgment: "
edited by Hugo Tristram Engelhardt, Stuart F. Spicker, Bernard Towers.
Document Type
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BL
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Record Number
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774117
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Doc. No
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b594111
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Main Entry
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edited by Hugo Tristram Engelhardt, Stuart F. Spicker, Bernard Towers.
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Title & Author
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Clinical Judgment: : A Critical Appraisal : Proceedings of the Fifth Trans-Disciplinary Symposium on Philosophy and Medicine Held at Los Angeles, California, April 14-16, 1977\ edited by Hugo Tristram Engelhardt, Stuart F. Spicker, Bernard Towers.
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Publication Statement
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Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 1979
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Series Statement
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Philosophy and medicine, 6.
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Page. NO
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(XXVI, 279 pages)
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ISBN
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9400993994
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: 9789400993990
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Contents
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Section I / Intuitions, Hunches, and Rules for Reasoning --; Clinical Judgment --; Human Factors in Clinical Judgment: Discussion of Scriven's 'Clinical Judgment' --; The Art and Science of Clinical Judgment: An Informational Approach --; When Does a Diagnosis Become a Clinical Judgment? Verifiability, Reliability and Umbrella Effects in Diagnosis --; Section II / The Logic of Health Care --; Classification and Its Alternatives --; Comments on Murphy's 'Classification and Its Alternatives' --; Simulating Clinical Judgment: An Essay in Technological Psychology --; A Clinician's Quest for Certainty --; A Reply to Ernan McMullin --; The Logic of Clinical Judgment: Bayesian and Other Approaches --; Suppes on the Logic of Clinical Judgment --; Section III / Clinicians on Clinical Judgment --; The Anatomy of Clinical Judgments: Some Notes on Right Reason and Right Action --; Comments on Pellegrino's 'Anatomy of Clinical Judgment' --; The Subjective in Clinical Judgment --; Subjectivity and the Scope of Clinical Judgment --; Section IV / Judgment and Methods in Clinical Judgment --; Round Table Discussion --; Round Table Discussion --; Round Table Discussion --; Round Table Discussion --; Round Table Discussion --; Closing Remarks --; Notes on Contributors.
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Abstract
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Over a period of a year, the symposium on clinical judgment has taken shape as a volume devoted to the analysis of how knowledge claims are framed in medicine and how choices of treatment are made. We hope it will afford the reader, whether layman, physician or philosopher, a useful perspective on the process of knowing what occurs in medicine; and that the results of the dis cussions at the Fifth Symposium on Philosophy and Medicine will lead to a better understanding of how philosophy and medicine can usefully challenge each other. As the interchange between physicians, philosophers, nurses and psychologists recorded in the major papers, the commentaries and the round table discussion shows, these issues are truly interdisciplinary. In particular, they have shown that members of the health care professions have much to learn about themselves from philosophers as well as much of interest to engage philosophers. By making the structure of medical reasoning more apparent to its users, philosophers can show health care practitioners how better to master clinical judgment and how better to focus it towards the goods and values medicine wishes to pursue. Becoming clearer about the process of knowing can in short teach us how to know better and how to learn more efficiently. The result can be more than (though it surely would be enough!) a powerful intellectual insight into a major cultural endeavor, medicine.
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Subject
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Medical ethics.
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Subject
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Medicine -- Philosophy.
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LC Classification
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R723.E358 1979
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Added Entry
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Bernard Towers
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Hugo Tristram Engelhardt
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Stuart F Spicker
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Parallel Title
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Proceedings of the fifth trans-disciplinary symposium on philosophy an medicine held at Los Angeles, California, April 14-16, 1977
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