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Published in: Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 2/2014

01-05-2014 | Scientific Contribution

The relevance of the philosophical ‘mind–body problem’ for the status of psychosomatic medicine: a conceptual analysis of the biopsychosocial model

Authors: Lukas Van Oudenhove, Stefaan Cuypers

Published in: Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy | Issue 2/2014

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Abstract

Psychosomatic medicine, with its prevailing biopsychosocial model, aims to integrate human and exact sciences with their divergent conceptual models. Therefore, its own conceptual foundations, which often remain implicit and unknown, may be critically relevant. We defend the thesis that choosing between different metaphysical views on the ‘mind–body problem’ may have important implications for the conceptual foundations of psychosomatic medicine, and therefore potentially also for its methods, scientific status and relationship with the scientific disciplines it aims to integrate: biomedical sciences (including neuroscience), psychology and social sciences. To make this point, we introduce three key positions in the philosophical ‘mind–body’ debate (emergentism, reductionism, and supervenience physicalism) and investigate their consequences for the conceptual basis of the biopsychosocial model in general and its ‘psycho-biological’ part (‘mental causation’) in particular. Despite the clinical merits of the biopsychosocial model, we submit that it is conceptually underdeveloped or even flawed, which may hamper its use as a proper scientific model.
Footnotes
1
We are thankful to one anonymous referee who advised us to make this broad-narrow distinction.
 
2
Again, we thank one anonymous referee who posed this challenge to us.
 
3
Once again, we are indebted to one anonymous referee who invited us to make our critique more explicit.
 
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Metadata
Title
The relevance of the philosophical ‘mind–body problem’ for the status of psychosomatic medicine: a conceptual analysis of the biopsychosocial model
Authors
Lukas Van Oudenhove
Stefaan Cuypers
Publication date
01-05-2014
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Published in
Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy / Issue 2/2014
Print ISSN: 1386-7423
Electronic ISSN: 1572-8633
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11019-013-9521-1

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