“What They Think of the Causes of So Much Suffering”: S. Weir Mitchell, John Kearsley Mitchell, and Ideas about Phantom Limb Pain in Late 19th c. America

IF 0.1 Q4 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Daniel Goldberg
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

This paper analyzes S. Weir Mitchell and his son John Kearsley Mitchell’s views on phantom limb pain in late 19th c. America. Drawing on a variety of primary sources including journal articles, letters, and treatises, the paper pioneers analysis of a cache of surveys sent out by the Mitchells that contain amputee Civil War veterans’ own narratives of phantom limb pain. The paper utilizes an approach drawn from the history of ideas, documenting how changing models of medicine and objectivity help explain the Mitchells’s attitudes, practices, and beliefs regarding the enigma of phantom limb pain as experienced by their patients. The paper also assesses concerns over malingering, pain, authenticity, and deception through these intellectual frameworks of somaticism and mechanical objectivity. The paper concludes that much of relevance to the ways in which the Mitchells and other late 19th c. neurologists regarded and treated their patients’ pain is explicable in terms of the larger intellectual frameworks that structured these healers’ ideas about lesionless pain.
“他们认为造成这么多痛苦的原因是什么”:S. Weir Mitchell, John Kearsley Mitchell,以及19世纪末美国幻肢痛的观点
本文分析了19世纪末美国S. Weir Mitchell及其儿子John Kearsley Mitchell对幻肢痛的看法。利用各种主要来源,包括期刊文章,信件和论文,论文开创性地分析了米切尔夫妇发出的一系列调查,这些调查包含了被截肢的内战退伍军人自己对幻肢痛的叙述。这篇论文利用了一种从思想的历史中提取的方法,记录了医学和客观性的变化模型如何帮助解释米切尔夫妇的态度、实践和信仰,他们的病人经历了幻肢痛的谜题。本文还通过躯体主义和机械客观性的知识框架评估了对装病、痛苦、真实性和欺骗的关注。这篇论文的结论是,米切尔夫妇和其他19世纪晚期的神经科医生看待和治疗病人疼痛的方式,在很大程度上可以用更大的智力框架来解释,这些框架构建了这些治疗师关于无病变疼痛的想法。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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