医学虚无主义:脱离语境的医学批判的局限

Arjun Devanesan
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引用次数: 1

摘要

在一本名为《医学虚无主义》(2018)的有趣新书中,雅各布·斯泰根加试图让我们相信,现代医学疗法没有我们想象的那么有效。鉴于医学假设的异质性以及支持或反对这些假设的证据,我认为,除非大幅削弱,否则无法进行这种脱离背景的批评。相反,我提出了另一种更微妙、更站得住脚的医学认知观。根据这一观点,评估医学证据既需要分析研究方法,如随机对照试验(RCT),也需要分析具体情况信息。这是因为进行试验(甚至是随机对照试验)的方式(例如,招募的人群以及如何进行干预)会有所不同,并且会对取得积极结果的可能性产生重大影响。此外,试验的积极结果与干预的实际有效性(试验效度)之间的关系将取决于这些特定于环境的因素。我通过展示如何通过考虑上下文来质疑Stegenga关于医学试验的每一个个人主张(试验偏向于积极结果等)来反对虚无主义的立场。
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Medical nihilism: The limits of a decontextualised critique of medicine

In a new and interesting book entitled Medical Nihilism (2018), Jacob Stegenga attempts to convince us that modern medical therapies are less effective than we think. Given the heterogeneity of hypotheses in medicine and the evidence for or against them, I argue that such a decontextualised critique cannot be made unless substantially weakened. Instead, I put forward an alternative, more nuanced and defensible epistemic view of medicine. According to this view, evaluating medical evidence requires analysis of both the methods of research e.g. randomised controlled trial (RCT), and context-specific information. This is because the way a trial (even an RCT) is conducted e.g. the population recruited and how it is intervened on, will vary and will have significant effects on the likelihood of a positive outcome. Moreover, the relationship between the positive outcome of a trial and the actual effectiveness of an intervention (the trial validity) will depend on these context specific factors. I argue for this position against nihilism by showing how each of Stegenga's individual claims about medical trials (trials are biased in favour of positive outcomes etc) can be questioned by taking the context into consideration.

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期刊介绍: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences is devoted to historical, sociological, philosophical and ethical aspects of the life and environmental sciences, of the sciences of mind and behaviour, and of the medical and biomedical sciences and technologies. Contributions are from a wide range of countries and cultural traditions; we encourage both specialist articles, and articles combining historical, philosophical, and sociological approaches; and we favour works of interest to scientists and medics as well as to specialists in the history, philosophy and sociology of the sciences.
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