Abstract
In a time when we as a society are in the process of deciding what our basic rights to health care are, it is critically important for us to have a full and complete understanding of what constitutes health. We argue for an analysis of health according to which certain states are healthy not in themselves but because they allow an individual to reach actual goals. Recognizing that the goals of an individual considered from the point of view of biology and the goals of the same individual considered as an agent in the world might be different, we introduce a distinction between the health of an individual qua organism and the health of an individual qua person. We then argue that this distinction characterizes the evaluations made by patients and healthcare providers better than the widely discussed distinction between disease and illness.
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Richman, K.A., Budson, A.E. Health of Organisms and Health of Persons: An Embedded Instrumentalist Approach. Theor Med Bioeth 21, 339–354 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1009994806758
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1009994806758