Hermeneutics at the Intersection of Medical Technology

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This book explores the crucial role of interpretation in medical radiology and beyond, emphasizing its pervasive influence on medical knowledge. Friis examines radiological analysis through hermeneutics, cognition, and visual perception studies. He argues that interpretation is inherently embodied and essential to human action, particularly in radiology, where technology extends vision beyond the human eye's limits. Yet, interpretation varies among radiologists. Can it be too relative, shaped by subjective factors irrelevant to the task? Attempts to eliminate cognitive bias through psychophysical and cognitivist approaches have failed. Interpretation is an active, context-dependent process, inseparable from human experience. Friis contends that the only solution is to expand cognitive reach through collaborative interpretative practices, integrating diverse perspectives. Radiology, like all medical fields, benefits from shared expertise, where multiple viewpoints refine diagnostic accuracy and mitigate individual bias. By fostering structured cooperation among radiologists, clinicians, interpretative reliability can be strengthened. The key is not to eliminate subjectivity but to harness it constructively through interdisciplinary dialogue, collective reasoning, and continuous knowledge exchange.


Discusses radiological analytical practices from the perspectives of hermeneutics Explores the problem of cognitive-bias in radiological image interpretation Offers new perspectives to the complexity of image analysis

Autorentext

Jan Kyrre Berg Olsen Friis is an associate professor of philosophy of medical science and technology at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark.


Klappentext

Hermeneutics at the Intersection of Medical Technology offers an important contribution to both the fields of hermeneutics and of philosophy of medicine. By applying a hermeneutic approach to medicine, particularly radiology, Jan Friis convincingly shows that interpretation is at the heart of medical practice and shows how interpretation is biologically, contextually, and technologically shaped. The book is a valuable resource for readers interested in theoretical hermeneutics as well as for those that seek to apply the hermeneutic method to medicine.
Bas de Boer, University of Twente, The Netherlands

Hermeneutics at the Intersection of Medical Technology is a rich and thoughtful contribution to the emerging field of the philosophy of diagnostic imaging. It compellingly argues that radiological interpretation is deeply interpretative, shaped by the historical, cultural, and cognitive contexts of practitioners. By bridging the hermeneutic traditions of Heidegger and Gadamer with embodied cognition and radiology, this book will be of interest to philosophers and practitioners alike.
Elisabetta Lalumera, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Bologna, Italy

This book explores the crucial role of interpretation in medical radiology and beyond, emphasizing its pervasive influence on medical knowledge. Friis examines radiological analysis through hermeneutics, cognition, and visual perception studies. He argues that interpretation is inherently embodied and essential to human action, particularly in radiology, where technology extends vision beyond the human eye's limits. Yet, interpretation varies among radiologists. Can it be too relative, shaped by subjective factors irrelevant to the task? Attempts to eliminate cognitive bias through psychophysical and cognitivist approaches have failed. Interpretation is an active, context-dependent process, inseparable from human experience. Friis contends that the only solution is to expand cognitive reach through collaborative interpretative practices, integrating diverse perspectives. Radiology, like all medical fields, benefits from shared expertise, where multiple viewpoints refine diagnostic accuracy and mitigate individual bias. By fostering structured cooperation among radiologists, clinicians, interpretative reliability can be strengthened. The key is not to eliminate subjectivity but to harness it constructively through interdisciplinary dialogue, collective reasoning, and continuous knowledge exchange.

Jan Kyrre Berg Olsen Friis is an associate professor of philosophy of medical science and technology at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark.


Inhalt

  1. Hermeneutics and Medical Practice.- 2. Disruptive Cognitions, and Interpretation.- 3. Cognitivism.- 4. Historical Attampts at Embodied Hermeneutical Cognition.- 5. Interpretation. 6. Hermeneutics and Meaning Making in A World Of Things.- 7. Hermeneutics and Objectivity.- 8. Temporality and Interpretation.- 9. Material Hermeneutics.- 10. Forensic Interpretation.- 11. Embodied, Embedded, Experienced, Extended.- 12. Advancing The Theory of Understanding.

Weitere Informationen

  • Allgemeine Informationen
    • GTIN 09783031887543
    • Genre Philosophy
    • Lesemotiv Verstehen
    • Anzahl Seiten 174
    • Größe H210mm x B148mm
    • Jahr 2025
    • EAN 9783031887543
    • Format Fester Einband
    • ISBN 978-3-031-88754-3
    • Veröffentlichung 08.05.2025
    • Titel Hermeneutics at the Intersection of Medical Technology
    • Autor Jan Kyrre Berg Olsen Friis
    • Untertitel Interpretation Reimagined
    • Herausgeber Springer Nature Switzerland
    • Sprache Englisch

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