Current status and future prospects of the history medicine in Germany--dedicated to Ulrich Hadding
Saved in:
Published in: | Medizinhistorisches Journal |
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Main Author: | |
Other Authors: | |
Format: | Article |
Language: | German |
Published: | 2003 |
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abstract |
Science aims at generalised knowledge about human beings. Medical action, by contrast, is directed towards individuals and their subjectivity. Thus, in the doctor-patient encounter the scientific object-orientation of medical science turns into the subject-orientation of medical practice. This means that modern medicine can essentially be explained through the social sciences and the arts and humanities. Among these approaches, historiography explores the aspect of action in time. The historiography of medicine therefore aims genuinely at the specific aspect of medical action under its conditions in time. In its current transition from the natural sciences to the life sciences, medicine meets its boundaries not only in science and practice, but also in the individual person and in the social world. It is of utmost importance, for medicine as well as for society, to analyse the historicity of medical knowledge and action by historiographical methods. The results of historiographical research are to be explained--as a history of medicine--to the public and--as a history in medicine--to medicine itself. And in a sort of a pragmatic history in medicine they are to be turned to practical use for current problems of medical action Date Completed 12.09.2003 Date Revised 11.11.2009 published: Print Citation Status MEDLINE |
abstractGer |
Science aims at generalised knowledge about human beings. Medical action, by contrast, is directed towards individuals and their subjectivity. Thus, in the doctor-patient encounter the scientific object-orientation of medical science turns into the subject-orientation of medical practice. This means that modern medicine can essentially be explained through the social sciences and the arts and humanities. Among these approaches, historiography explores the aspect of action in time. The historiography of medicine therefore aims genuinely at the specific aspect of medical action under its conditions in time. In its current transition from the natural sciences to the life sciences, medicine meets its boundaries not only in science and practice, but also in the individual person and in the social world. It is of utmost importance, for medicine as well as for society, to analyse the historicity of medical knowledge and action by historiographical methods. The results of historiographical research are to be explained--as a history of medicine--to the public and--as a history in medicine--to medicine itself. And in a sort of a pragmatic history in medicine they are to be turned to practical use for current problems of medical action Date Completed 12.09.2003 Date Revised 11.11.2009 published: Print Citation Status MEDLINE |
abstract_unstemmed |
Science aims at generalised knowledge about human beings. Medical action, by contrast, is directed towards individuals and their subjectivity. Thus, in the doctor-patient encounter the scientific object-orientation of medical science turns into the subject-orientation of medical practice. This means that modern medicine can essentially be explained through the social sciences and the arts and humanities. Among these approaches, historiography explores the aspect of action in time. The historiography of medicine therefore aims genuinely at the specific aspect of medical action under its conditions in time. In its current transition from the natural sciences to the life sciences, medicine meets its boundaries not only in science and practice, but also in the individual person and in the social world. It is of utmost importance, for medicine as well as for society, to analyse the historicity of medical knowledge and action by historiographical methods. The results of historiographical research are to be explained--as a history of medicine--to the public and--as a history in medicine--to medicine itself. And in a sort of a pragmatic history in medicine they are to be turned to practical use for current problems of medical action Date Completed 12.09.2003 Date Revised 11.11.2009 published: Print Citation Status MEDLINE |
allfields |
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pubmed24n0416.xml (DE-627)NLM124744478 (NLM)12703267 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb ger Labisch, Alfons verfasserin aut Current status and future prospects of the history medicine in Germany--dedicated to Ulrich Hadding Stand und Perspektiven der Medizingeschichte in Deutschland--für Ulrich Hadding 2003 Text txt rdacontent ohne Hilfsmittel zu benutzen n rdamedia Band nc rdacarrier Date Completed 12.09.2003 Date Revised 11.11.2009 published: Print Citation Status MEDLINE Science aims at generalised knowledge about human beings. Medical action, by contrast, is directed towards individuals and their subjectivity. Thus, in the doctor-patient encounter the scientific object-orientation of medical science turns into the subject-orientation of medical practice. This means that modern medicine can essentially be explained through the social sciences and the arts and humanities. Among these approaches, historiography explores the aspect of action in time. The historiography of medicine therefore aims genuinely at the specific aspect of medical action under its conditions in time. In its current transition from the natural sciences to the life sciences, medicine meets its boundaries not only in science and practice, but also in the individual person and in the social world. It is of utmost importance, for medicine as well as for society, to analyse the historicity of medical knowledge and action by historiographical methods. The results of historiographical research are to be explained--as a history of medicine--to the public and--as a history in medicine--to medicine itself. And in a sort of a pragmatic history in medicine they are to be turned to practical use for current problems of medical action Biography English Abstract Historical Article Journal Article Hadding, Ulrich erwähnter oth Enthalten in Medizinhistorisches Journal 1969 37(2003), 3-4 vom: 18., Seite 352-79 (DE-627)NLM092858589 0025-8431 nnns volume:37 year:2003 number:3-4 day:18 pages:352-79 GBV_USEFLAG_A GBV_NLM AR 37 2003 3-4 18 352-79 |
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pubmed24n0416.xml (DE-627)NLM124744478 (NLM)12703267 DE-627 ger DE-627 rakwb ger Labisch, Alfons verfasserin aut Current status and future prospects of the history medicine in Germany--dedicated to Ulrich Hadding Stand und Perspektiven der Medizingeschichte in Deutschland--für Ulrich Hadding 2003 Text txt rdacontent ohne Hilfsmittel zu benutzen n rdamedia Band nc rdacarrier Date Completed 12.09.2003 Date Revised 11.11.2009 published: Print Citation Status MEDLINE Science aims at generalised knowledge about human beings. Medical action, by contrast, is directed towards individuals and their subjectivity. Thus, in the doctor-patient encounter the scientific object-orientation of medical science turns into the subject-orientation of medical practice. This means that modern medicine can essentially be explained through the social sciences and the arts and humanities. Among these approaches, historiography explores the aspect of action in time. The historiography of medicine therefore aims genuinely at the specific aspect of medical action under its conditions in time. In its current transition from the natural sciences to the life sciences, medicine meets its boundaries not only in science and practice, but also in the individual person and in the social world. It is of utmost importance, for medicine as well as for society, to analyse the historicity of medical knowledge and action by historiographical methods. The results of historiographical research are to be explained--as a history of medicine--to the public and--as a history in medicine--to medicine itself. And in a sort of a pragmatic history in medicine they are to be turned to practical use for current problems of medical action Biography English Abstract Historical Article Journal Article Hadding, Ulrich erwähnter oth Enthalten in Medizinhistorisches Journal 1969 37(2003), 3-4 vom: 18., Seite 352-79 (DE-627)NLM092858589 0025-8431 nnns volume:37 year:2003 number:3-4 day:18 pages:352-79 GBV_USEFLAG_A GBV_NLM AR 37 2003 3-4 18 352-79 |
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Labisch, Alfons misc Biography misc English Abstract misc Historical Article misc Journal Article Current status and future prospects of the history medicine in Germany--dedicated to Ulrich Hadding |
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Current status and future prospects of the history medicine in Germany--dedicated to Ulrich Hadding |
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Stand und Perspektiven der Medizingeschichte in Deutschland--für Ulrich Hadding |
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Current status and future prospects of the history medicine in Germany--dedicated to Ulrich Hadding |
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Current status and future prospects of the history medicine in Germany--dedicated to Ulrich Hadding |
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Current status and future prospects of the history medicine in Germany--dedicated to Ulrich Hadding |
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current status and future prospects of the history medicine in germany--dedicated to ulrich hadding |
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Biography English Abstract Historical Article Journal Article |
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Current status and future prospects of the history medicine in Germany--dedicated to Ulrich Hadding Biography English Abstract Historical Article Journal Article |
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misc Biography misc English Abstract misc Historical Article misc Journal Article |
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2024-03-04T20:00:34.120Z |