| pitt hps graduate
student wip talks
The graduate students in the History
and Philosophy of Science department at the University
of Pittsburgh host regular Work in Progress talks to
share ideas, get feedback, and promote community.
Talks are held in Room G28 of the Cathedral of Learning. While
talks are not generally open to the public, exceptions can be made:
Please contact Bryan
Roberts if you are interested in attending an upcoming
talk.
Next WIP Talk
2009 November 6 at 5:30 pm
Health Need
Jason Byron
Norman Daniels has developed an influential account
of the just distribution of health care services and of what constitutes
health needs. On that account, health needs are just those things
we need to maintain, restore, or provide functional equivalents
to (where possible) health. Health is the absence of pathology,
which Daniels defines as any deviation from the functional organization
of a typical member of the species or relevant species subgroup.
Harmful pathologies are just those deviations in normal species
functioning that restrict affected persons from a fair share of
the normal range of opportunity open to them. One’s fair share
of the normal range are the life plans one may reasonably choose,
given one’s talents and skills (and correcting for unjust
social arrangements that disadvantage some from developing their
skills and talents). When one’s fair share of the normal range
is restricted by harmful pathology, justice demands that society
make certain efforts to restore it via access to health care services.
This is because failing to restore that share of the normal range
deprives individuals of their capacity to function as free and equal
citizens—that is, citizens able to change their conception
of the good over time and able to take advantage of their basic
rights and liberties. In this way, meeting health needs is a fundamental
requirement of justice.
In this talk, I criticize Daniels's account on two
grounds. First, I argue that pathologies are not in fact objectively
ascribable in the sense Daniels claims. Second, I argue that objective
ascribability in Daniels’s sense is not required for pathology
to be objectively important. (I will not directly consider whether
welfarist accounts of health, according to which health needs arise
solely from preferences, could satisfactorily answer the question
of equity. It will suffice for my purposes that Daniels’s
non-welfarist account provides grounds on which reasoned consensus
is plausible.)
|
 |
 |
 |
upcoming wip
talks
September 18, 2009:
Tom Pashby
(abstract)

October 9, 2009:
Greg Gandenberger
(abstract)

October 16, 2009:
Balazs
Gyenis
(abstract)

October 23, 2009:
Bryan Roberts
(abstract)

October 30, 2009:
Julia Bursten
(abstract)

November 6, 2009:
Jason Byron
(abstract)
|