3.8 Article

Health and Illness as Enacted Phenomena

Journal

TOPOI-AN INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF PHILOSOPHY
Volume 41, Issue 2, Pages 373-382

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11245-021-09747-0

Keywords

Health theory; Phenomenology of illness; Enactivism; Biopsychosocial; Existential feelings; Philosophical anthropology

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Funding

  1. Sodertorn University

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Health is experienced through transparency and ease in completing life projects, while illness is characterized by the presence of bodily pains and other unhomelike existential feelings that hinder flourishing.
In this paper I explore health and illness through the lens of enactivism, which is understood and developed as a bodily-based worldly-engaged phenomenology. Various health theories - biomedical, ability-based, biopsychosocial - are introduced and scrutinized from the point of view of enactivism and phenomenology. Health is ultimately argued to consist in a central world-disclosing aspect of what is called existential feelings, experienced by way of transparency and ease in carrying out important life projects. Health, in such a phenomenologically enacted understanding, is an important and in many cases necessary part of leading a good life. Illness, on the other hand, by such a phenomenological view, consist in finding oneself at mercy of unhomelike existential feelings, such as bodily pains, nausea, extreme unmotivated tiredness, depression, chronic anxiety and delusion, which make it harder and, in some cases, impossible to flourish. In illness suffering the lived body hurts, resists, or, in other ways, alienates the activities of the ill person.

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