AI Article Synopsis

  • The authors defend their classification of pregnancy as a disease, countering criticisms from other scholars.
  • They argue that the critics' perspective on the dysfunctionality of disease presents confusing conclusions and incorrectly assumes that reproduction is the main function of sexual organs.
  • Lastly, they highlight issues with considering pregnancy as a separate reference class, claiming it undermines the usefulness of the Boorsean approach to defining disease and health.

Article Abstract

We recently suggested that there are both pragmatic and normative reasons to classify pregnancy as a disease. Several scholars argued against our claims. In this response, we defend the disease view of pregnancy against their criticism. We claim that the dysfunctional account of disease that some of our critics rely on has some counterintuitive results. Furthermore, we claim that our critics assume what needs to be argued that the primary function of our sexual organs is to reproduce. Since only a small percentage of sexual intercourse leads to pregnancy, it is far from obvious that reproduction is the primary biological function of our sexual organs. We also claim that while taking pregnancy itself as a reference class could avoid the conclusion that pregnancy is a disease, the strategy is problematic since it renders the Boorsean approach to disease and health circular and effectively deprives it of any utility in determining whether a particular phenomenon is a disease or not.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jme-2024-110459DOI Listing

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