In Explaining Cancer, Anya Plutynski addresses a variety of philosophical questions that arise in the context of cancer science and medicine. She begins with the following concerns:
? How do scientists classify cancer? Do these classifications reflect nature's "joints"?
? How do cancer scientists identify and classify early stage cancers?
? What does it mean to say that cancer is a "genetic" disease? What role do genes play in "mechanisms for" cancer?
? What are the most important environmental causes of cancer, and how do epidemiologists investigate these causes?
? How exactly has our evolutionary history made us vulnerable to cancer?
Explaining Cancer uses these questions as an entr?e into a family of philosophical debates. It uses case studies of scientific practice to reframe philosophical debates about natural classification in science and medicine, the problem of drawing the line between disease and health, mechanistic reasoning in science, pragmatics and evidence, the roles of models and modeling in science, and the nature of scientific explanation.
Anya Plutynski received her Ph.D. in Philosophy, and her M.A. in Biology, both from the University of Pennsylvania. She currently teaches philosophy at Washington University in St. Louis.
Introduction
Chapter 1: Cancer: Natural, Social and Medical Kind
Chapter 2: From Disease to Risk
Chapter 3: Causation, Causal Selection and Causal Parity
Chapter 4: Evidence and Environmental Epidemiology: A Pragmatic Approach
Chapter 5: Explaining Cancer from an Evolutionary Perspective
Chapter 6: Explanation
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index