Modern medicine is one of humankinds greatest achievements.Yet today, frequent medical errors and irreproducibility in biomedical research suggest that tremendous challenges beset it. Understanding these challenges and trying to remedy them have driven considerable and thoughtful critical analyses, but the apparent intransigence of these problems suggests a different perspective is needed. Now more than ever, when we see options and opportunities for healthcare expanding whileresources are diminishing, it is extremely important that healthcare professionals practice medicine wisely.In Medical Reasoning, neurologist Erwin B. Montgomery, Jr. offers a new and vital perspective. He begins with the idea that the need for certainty in medical decision-making has been the primary driving force in medical reasoning. Doctors must routinely confront countless manifestations of symptoms, diseases, or behaviors in their patients. Therefore, either there are as many different diseases as there are patients or some economical set of principles and facts can becombined to explain each patients disease. The response to this epistemic conundrum has driven medicine throughout history:: the challenge is to discover principles and facts and then to develop means to apply them to each unique patient in a manner that provides certainty. This book studies the nature of medical decision making systematically and rigorously in both an analytic and historical context, addressing medicines unique need for certainty in the face of the enormous variety of diseases and in the manifestations of the same disease in different patients. The book also examines how the social, legal, and economic circumstances in which medical decision-making occurs greatly influence the nature of medical reasoning. Medical Reasoning is essentialfor those at the intersection of healthcare and philosophy.
Glossary of Concepts; Preface; Chapter 1: Introduction; Chapter 2: What Are We to Make of Reasoning in Modern Medicine?; Chapter 3: Epistemic Challenges and the Necessary Epistemic Responses; Chapter 4: Medical Epistemology: The Issues; Chapter 5: Deduction, Induction, and Abduction: The Basics; Chapter 6: Evolution of Medical Reasoning; Chapter 7: Variability versus Diversity in Variety-The Epistemic Conundrum and Responses; Chapter 8: The Meaninglessness of the Mean; Chapter 9: The Value of Statistical and Logical Thinking; Chapter 10: The Centrality and Origins of Hypotheses; Chapter 11: Necessary Presuppositions: The Metaphysics; Chapter 12: The False Notion of Intention, Choice, and Inhibition; Chapter 13: The Role of Metaphor; Chapter 14: Dynamics; Chapter 15: Medical Science versus Medical Technology; Chapter 16: Irreproducibility in Biomedical Science; Chapter 17: Medical Solipsism; Chapter 18: Critique of Practical and Clinical Medical Reasoning; Chapter 19: A Calling to Be Better Than Ourselves; Available on a Companion Website:; Appendix A: A Very Brief and Selective Introduction to Logic; Appendix B: A Basic and Selective Introduction to Probability and Statistics;
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