Dear Cambridge Philosophers of Science,

This message is a reminder that today Alex Broadbent from Johannesburg 
will talk about 'Prediction and Medicine'.  The talk will be at HPS 
downstairs at 1 as usual.  The abstract is below.

Sincerely,

Brian Pitts


'Prediction and Medicine'

Historian of medicine Roy Porter maintains that the position of medicine 
in society has had, and still has, little to do with its ability to make 
people better. There is a line of thinking in both history and 
philosophy of medicine that we might call medical nihilism (following 
Jacob Stegenga). This view holds that medicine is not what it is cracked 
up to be. But this view assumes (unlike Porter) that the purpose of 
medicine is indeed to cure people. In this paper I argue that the core 
medical competence is not to cure, nor to prevent, but to predict 
disease. The predictions expected of doctors are both actual and 
counterfactual: both "When will I get better?"  and "What would have 
happened if I had not taken my medicine?". This "predictive thesis" does 
a better job than the "curative thesis" at explaining why not all 
medicine is concerned with curative efforts, and it enjoys considerable 
historical support from the ancient entanglement of prophesy and 
medicine and from the fact that medicine thrived for centuries with 
almost no effective cures, and continues to thrive
today in various non-Western and complimentary forms that are mostly 
without curative efficacy. I also argue that it relieves medicine of the 
pretences of potency that generate the anger implicit in the  arguments 
for medical nihilism. This view also affects expectations of 
epidemiology, which is sometimes criticised for cataloguing predictive 
risk factors whose causal relation to the outcome is unclear, instead of 
identifying decisive interventions. Finally I ask whether this 
descriptive thesis about the nature of medicine offers any normative 
lessons for the development of medicine.


-- 
J. Brian Pitts
Senior Research Associate
Faculty of Philosophy
University of Cambridge
[email protected]

Ph.D., Philosophy/History & Philosophy of Science, University of Notre 
Dame
Ph.D., Physics, University of Texas at Austin


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