Being born is the most “natural” event (biologically defined) and, at the same time, the most com x event. The progressive medicalization of birth has led to a decreased interest in the lived experience which accompany it. Focusing on the delivery and the way it is conducted from a medical perspective, in a positivist vision, means reduce the existential relevance of childbirth (becoming a parent and caring relationship) to a purely biological reality, to the body-as-organism rather then to the body-as-person
Coming into the world: a dialogue between medical and human sciences / LA SALA, Giovanni Battista; Fagandini, P; Iori, V; Monti, F; Blickstein, I.. - STAMPA. - (2006), pp. 1-95.
Coming into the world: a dialogue between medical and human sciences
LA SALA, Giovanni Battista;
2006
Abstract
Being born is the most “natural” event (biologically defined) and, at the same time, the most com x event. The progressive medicalization of birth has led to a decreased interest in the lived experience which accompany it. Focusing on the delivery and the way it is conducted from a medical perspective, in a positivist vision, means reduce the existential relevance of childbirth (becoming a parent and caring relationship) to a purely biological reality, to the body-as-organism rather then to the body-as-personPubblicazioni consigliate
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