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1.
Acta Biotheor ; 49(2): 125-40, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11450808

ABSTRACT

Biology incorporated into other disciplines is often distorted, alarmingly so in some areas of medicine. Together with other forms of bias, this may have detrimental effects for patients depending on medical research for their health. A case study concerning omeprazole (Losec), one of the acid-suppressive drugs against gastric ulcers, and NSAIDs, non-steroid anti-inflammatory drugs, confirms that distorted biology together with biased health care policies foster disasters in current biomedicine and medical practice. In our country, The Netherlands, omeprazole is presumably the most commonly used medication. NSAIDs are also used in large quantities, increasingly since they have become available as analgesic over-the-counter drugs. Unofficial and official sources tend to inform the general public that the drugs promote human health. We argue that their being used on a massive scale is actually a medical disaster. The health of many patients would be served better if the drugs they take were replaced by proper forms of diet, but the pharmaceutical industry, the most potent force affecting medication policies, appears to prevent a shift in the balance from over-medicalization towards healthy life styles. The shift should come from government agencies responsible for regulation in the medication market. Policies of these agencies are now a dismal failure.


Subject(s)
Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal/adverse effects , Diet Therapy , Drug Costs/trends , Drug Industry , Omeprazole/adverse effects , Adverse Drug Reaction Reporting Systems , Anti-Inflammatory Agents, Non-Steroidal/economics , Arthritis, Rheumatoid/economics , Arthritis, Rheumatoid/therapy , Cost-Benefit Analysis/trends , Diet Therapy/economics , Drug Approval , Drug Industry/economics , Humans , Netherlands , Omeprazole/economics , Peptic Ulcer/economics , Peptic Ulcer/therapy , Treatment Outcome
2.
Med Hypotheses ; 54(5): 853-4, 2000 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10859701

ABSTRACT

The etiology of chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) remains an enigma. But literature concerning chronic fatigue which does not focus on CFS points to all sorts of enzyme deficiencies as possible causes. The deficiencies are probably dismissed as causes of CFS because other characteristic symptoms are lacking in CFS patients. But these symptoms are often also lacking in patients with a deficiency. Symptom patterns in enzyme deficiencies are extremely variable. Therefore, patients with CFS should be screened systematically for enzyme deficiencies.


Subject(s)
Enzymes/deficiency , Fatigue Syndrome, Chronic/enzymology , Humans
3.
Acta Biotheor ; 46(4): 369-77, 1998.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10423828

ABSTRACT

Research in behaviour genetics uncovers causes of behaviour at the population level. For inferences about individuals we also need to know how genes and the environment affect phenotypes. Behaviour genetics fosters a biased view of individual behaviour since it identifies the environment with psychosocial factors and disregards ecology.


Subject(s)
Ecology , Genetics, Behavioral/statistics & numerical data , Bias , Humans , Intelligence/genetics , Mental Disorders/genetics , Models, Genetic , Phenotype , Social Environment , Twin Studies as Topic
5.
Hist Philos Life Sci ; 16(3): 479-92, 1994.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7716250

ABSTRACT

Many authors have argued that the core of evolutionary biology as represented by the catchphrase 'The fittest survive' is tautological. Concerning the fitness concept of population genetics it is easy to rebut this charge by a proper explication of the term 'survival'. In biology and in the philosophy of biology, various fitness concepts over and above that of population genetics have been elaborated. These concepts, which are called 'supervenient' by some philosophers, have a limited usefulness. On some interpretations they do lead to unacceptable tautologies and circular reasoning. The so-called propensity concept of fitness is problematic in this respect. If interpreted in a proper way, supervenient concepts appear not to allow the formulation of highly general explanations and theories; at best they reveal common patterns among diverse non-general explanations and theories. Philosophers cherishing supervenient fitness concepts are apparently motivated by a mistaken search for general theory. The fitness concept of population genetics may play a role in relatively general theories and explanations. Supervenient concepts cannot play such a role. They should rather help us recognize the value of natural history in biology.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Genetics, Population , Animals , Humans , Philosophy
6.
Acta Biotheor ; 35(3): 185-91, 1986.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3092523

ABSTRACT

Rosenberg has rightly argued that fitness is supervenient. But he has wrongly assumed that this makes "The fittest survive" nontautologous. Supervenience makes strict reduction impossible. It sheds light on disputes concerning the testability of evolutionary theory.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Models, Genetic , Methods , Selection, Genetic
7.
Acta Biotheor ; 35(3): 193-204, 1986.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3092524

ABSTRACT

Evolutionary epistemology takes various forms. As a philosophical discipline, it may use analogies by borrowing concepts from evolutionary biology to establish new foundations. This is not a very successful enterprise because the analogies involved are so weak that they hardly have explanatory force. It may also veil itself with the garbs of biology. Proponents of this strategy have only produced irrelevant theories by transforming epistemology's concepts beyond recognition. Sensible theories about "knowledge and biology" should presuppose that various long-standing problems concerning relations between the mental and the physical are solved. Such problems are wrongly disregarded by evolutionary epistemologists.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Models, Genetic , Animals , Genetic Variation , Humans , Methods , Selection, Genetic
8.
Acta Biotheor ; 35(3): 205-21, 1986.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-3092525

ABSTRACT

Various philosophers and evolutionary biologists have recently defended the thesis that species are individuals rather than sets. A decade of debates, however, did not suffice to settle the matter. Conceptual analysis shows that many of the key terms involved ("individuation", "evolutionary species", "spatiotemporal restrictedness", "individual") are ambiguous. Current disagreements should dissolve once this is recognized. Explication of the concepts involved leads to new programs for philosophical research. It could also help biology by showing how extant controversies concerning evolution may have conceptual rather than factual roots.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Models, Genetic , Animals , Methods , Species Specificity
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