Existential Health. Philosophical and historical perspectives

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Date

2016

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Publisher

LIR. journal

Abstract

In this article I strive for a conceptual clarification and constructive elaboration of the concept of existential health. Taking my cue from the multidimensionality of health – re ferring to contemporary experience, the WHO definition of health as well as pre-modern conceptions of health – I compare existential health to other concepts of health – i.e. physical, mental, social and spiritual. I argue that existential health should not be seen as yet another dimension of health – not even spiritual health, the most likely candidate as Valerie DeMarinis and Cecilia Melder, two prominent Swedish psychologists of religion, has argued – but rather is a reflexive experience of health. By »reflexive« I mean an intentional relation to one’s own experience of ailment and health, in cluding a relation to these experiences as one’s own. My conclusion is that existential health as a concept should be reserved for this reflexive feature of human subjectivity in relation to health, cutting across all other health dimensions, so as not to confuse the conceptuality in speaking of health.

Description

Ola Sigurdson is professor of systematic theology and director of the Centre for Culture and Health at the University of Gothenburg.

Keywords

existential health, spiritual health, existential vs spiritual health, medical humanities

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