Today's Hours: 8:00am - 10:00pm

Search

Filter Applied Clear All

Did You Mean:

Search Results

  • Book
    Louise Cummings.
    Summary: This book argues that in order to be truly effective, public health must embrace a group of reasoning strategies that have traditionally been characterized as informal fallacies. It will be demonstrated that these strategies can facilitate judgements about complex public health issues in contexts of uncertainty. The book explains how scientists and lay people routinely resort to the use of these strategies during consideration of public health problems. Although these strategies are not deductively valid, they are nevertheless rationally warranted procedures. Public health professionals must have a sound understanding of these cognitive strategies in order to engage the public and achieve their public health goals. The book draws upon public health issues as wide ranging as infectious diseases, food safety and the potential impact on human health of new technologies. It examines reasoning in the context of these issues within a large-scale, questionnaire-based survey of nearly 900 members of the public in the UK. In addition, several philosophical themes run throughout the book, including the nature of uncertainty, scientific knowledge and inquiry. The complexity of many public health problems demands an approach to reasoning that cannot be accommodated satisfactorily within a general thinking skills framework. This book shows that by developing an awareness of these reasoning strategies, scientists and members of the public can have a more productive engagement with public health problems.

    Contents:
    Chapter One: The Challenge for Public Health
    Chapter Two: Philosophy and Public Health
    Chapter Three: Argument from Ignorance
    Chapter Four: Argument from Authority
    Chapter Five: Argument from Analogy
    Chapter Six: Circular Argument
    Chapter Seven: Fallacies in Public Health
    Chapter Eight: Theory of Public Health Reasoning
    Bibliography
    Index.
    Digital Access Springer 2015