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  1. Medicine and the individual: is phenomenology the answer?Tania L. Gergel - 2012 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 18 (5):1102-1109.
    The issue of how to incorporate the individual's first‐hand experience of illness into broader medical understanding is a major question in medical theory and practice. In a philosophical context, phenomenology, with its emphasis on the subject's perception of phenomena as the basis for knowledge and its questioning of naturalism, seems an obvious candidate for addressing these issues. This is a review of current phenomenological approaches to medicine, looking at what has motivated this philosophical approach, the main problems it faces and (...)
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  • On the Phenomenology of the Consciousness of Internal Time.Edmund Husserl - unknown
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  • The temporality of illness: Four levels of experience.S. Kay Toombs - 1990 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 11 (3).
    This essay argues that, while much has been gained by medicine's focus on the spatial aspects of disease in light of developments in modern pathology, too little attention has been given to the temporal experience of illness at the subjective level of the patient. In particular, it is noted that there is a radical distinction between subjective and objective time. Whereas the patient experiences his immediate illness in terms of the ongoing flux of subjective time, the physician conceptualizes the illness (...)
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  • Edmund Husserl, On the Phenomenology of the Consciousness of Internal Time. [REVIEW]Author unknown - 1992 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 54 (1):141-141.
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  • Heidegger, Gestell and rehabilitation of the biomedical model.Donald S. Borrett - 2013 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 19 (3):497-500.
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  • Patient experience of time duration: strategies for 'slowing time' and 'accelerating time' in general practices.Stephen Buetow - 2004 - Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 10 (1):21-25.
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  • How emotions colour our perception of time.Sylvie Droit-Volet & Warren H. Meck - 2007 - Trends in Cognitive Sciences 11 (12):504-513.
    Our sense of time is altered by our emotions to such an extent that time seems to fly when we are having fun and drags when we are bored. Recent studies using standardized emotional material provide a unique opportunity for understanding the neurocognitive mechanisms that underlie the effects of emotion on timing and time perception in the milliseconds-to-hours range. We outline how these new findings can be explained within the framework of internal-clock models and describe how emotional arousal and valence (...)
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  • Diabetes, Chronic Illness and the Bodily Roots of Ecstatic Temporality.David Morris - 2008 - Human Studies 31 (4):399-421.
    This article studies the phenomenology of chronic illness in light of phenomenology’s insights into ecstatic temporality and freedom. It shows how a chronic illness can, in lived experience, manifest itself as a disturbance of our usual relation to ecstatic temporality and thence as a disturbance of freedom. This suggests that ecstatic temporality is related to another sort of time—“provisional time”—that is in turn rooted in the body. The article draws on Merleau-Ponty’s Phenomenology of Perception and Heidegger’s Being and Time , (...)
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  • Temporality and illness: a phenomenological perspective.John B. Brough - 2001 - In S. Kay Toombs (ed.), Handbook of Phenomenology and Medicine. Kluwer Academic Publishers. pp. 29--46.
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