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Medical Humanities 2002;28:74-77; doi:10.1136/mh.28.2.74
Copyright © 2002 by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd & Institute of Medical Ethics.
2002;28:74-77
© 2002 Medical Humanities

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Art, science, and the existential focus of clinical medicine

A Warsop

Correspondence to:
Correspondence to:
Dr A Warsop, Jubilee Street Practice, 368–74 Commercial Road, London E1 0LS, UK;
awarsop{at}online.co.uk

The continuing debate over the status of medicine as an art or a science remains far from resolved. The aim of this paper is to clarify what is meant by the art of medicine. In the following interpretation I contrast two current perspectives of the medical art. I argue that the art of medicine is best understood in terms of the Aristotelian notion of techne. It consists of listening skills directed to the lived experience of the patient in such a way that knowledge (principally scientific knowledge) can be applied in a therapeutic way. This constitutes what I call medicine’s existential focus. The art of medicine is prior to and independent of medical science which plays an important but subordinate role.

Keywords: art of medicine; medical science; existential; techne


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