
Contents
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A Short History of a Long Word A Short History of a Long Word
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Sociality as (Bio)Ecology Sociality as (Bio)Ecology
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Agency and Integrity as Markers of Health Agency and Integrity as Markers of Health
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Biopsychosocial Models of Health and Illness
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Published:October 2022
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Extract
These first five chapters examine the role of a medical logic of practice in Christian spiritual direction. I mean the understanding, imbrication, and application of end-directedness, biopsychosocial knowing, diagnostic strategies, and therapeutic tactics. We will study the Galenic construction of these as the “medical art” in detail in Chapter 1. Chapters 2 and 3 argue for the predominance of diagnostic logic in ascetic thinking on dreams, while Chapters 4 and 5 show nosology and pathology in play with regard to “passions.” For all of these, I use as heuristic lens a modern theory, the “biopsychosocial” model of health and illness (BPS), expanded somewhat to incorporate Urie Bronfenbrenner’s “ecological” theory of human development. I do so for three reasons. First, BPS directs our attention toward body, soul, and sociality, all of which are implicated in ancient ideas of health and inflected into Christian ascetic projects. Second, in an “ecological” form, sociality includes nonhuman and environmental interactions and affordances key to early Christian formation. Third, in its expanded and updated form BPS treats context-oriented agency and bodily integrity as markers of health, points which are especially important in the formation of monastic subjects.
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