Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Show: 20 | 50 | 100
Results 1 - 2 de 2
Filter
Add more filters










Database
Language
Publication year range
2.
J Med Philos ; 14(2): 213-30, 1989 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2671230

ABSTRACT

Unrecognized presuppositions about patient appearance have become increasingly important in medicine, medical ethics and medical law. Symptoms of these historically conditioned assumptions include common ageism, aesthetic surgery, and litigation about 'wrongful life'. These phenomena suggest a societal intolerance for what is considered an 'abnormal' appearance. Among others, eighteenth-century artists and anatomists helped to set these twentieth-century precedents, actually measuring deviations of external traits to analogous deformations of the soul, and drawing moral conclusions from physiognomic measurements. Other eighteenth-century artists countered with pathognomy, recognizing that uneven physical features may indicate humanity, instead of character flaws. We suggest that there is an important and as yet unrecognized role played by visual and perceptual preferences in our judgments concerning normalcy and anomaly. We further suggest a shift away from our current fashion-magazine, youth-oriented aesthetic, and towards an aesthetic of imperfection. Physicians and medical students can be made aware of their historically conditioned reactions to 'abnormal' appearing patients by studying the understandings and methods with which artists have portrayed those who are considered deformed in appearance.


Subject(s)
Esthetics/history , Facial Expression , Health , Physiognomy , Congenital Abnormalities/psychology , Genetic Diseases, Inborn/psychology , History, 18th Century , History, 20th Century , Human Characteristics , Models, Anatomic , Self Concept , Social Values , Surgery, Plastic
SELECTION OF CITATIONS
SEARCH DETAIL
...