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Person, society and value
towards a personalist concept of health
Edited by
Paulina Taboada, Kateryna Fedoryka, Patricia Donohue-White
Besides offering a critical analysis of the WHO definition and a review of both ancient and contemporary conceptions of health, the cooperative effort of physicians and philosophers presented in this book works through the challenges which any definition of health faces, if it is to be both truly personalist, and at the same time operational.The overall purpose of this book is to capture the essentials of human health and to propose the outlines for a personalist understanding of this concept,i.e., a conception that does justice to the personal nature of human beings by introducing dimensions that are essential to personal life and well-being, such as the realms of rationality, affectivity and freedom, the realms of meaning, values, morality, and spirituality, the realms of social and interpersonal relations.
Publication details
DOI: 10.1007/978-94-017-2570-5
Full citation:
Taboada, P. , Fedoryka, K. , Donohue-White, P. (eds) (2002). Person, society and value: towards a personalist concept of health, Springer, Dordrecht.
Table of Contents
Reale Giovanni
19-31

Van Spijk Piet
209-227

Buttiglione Rocco; Pasquini Manuela
229-239

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