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curricular focus

Reconstructing a lost tradition: the philosophy of medical education in an age of reform

Christopher Martin

Faculty of Medicine, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St John’s, Newfoundland, Canada

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First published: 21 December 2012
Cited by: 6
Dr Christopher Martin, Faculty of Medicine, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St John’s, Newfoundland A1B 3V6, Canada. Tel: 00 1 709 777 2182; E‐mail: chris.martin@med.mun.ca

Abstract

Context At the 100th anniversary of Abraham Flexner’s landmark report on medical education, critical reassessment of the direction of medical education reform evinced valuable interdisciplinary contributions from biomedicine, sociology, psychology and education theory. However, to date, philosophy has been absent from the discussion despite its long standing contribution to studies on education in other professions.

Methods This discussion paper examines how the philosophical tradition can contribute to scholarship in medical education. It begins with an explanation of the scholarly tradition of philosophy of education and its role in thinking in education more generally. It then makes links between this tradition and the context of medical education in the Flexner era of education reform. The paper then argues that this tradition is necessary to the understanding of medical education reform post‐Flexner and that doctors must benefit from an education derived from this tradition in order to be able to carry out their work.

Discussion These foundations are characterised as a hidden, but always present, tradition in medical education. Two ways in which this ‘lost tradition’ can inform medical education theory and practice are identified: firstly, by the establishment of a public canon of medical education texts that express such a tradition, and, secondly, by the incorporation of a variety of ‘signature pedagogies’ exemplary of liberal education.

Number of times cited: 6

  • , A medical curriculum in transition: audit and student perspective of undergraduate teaching of ethics and professionalism, Journal of Medical Ethics, 43, 11, (766), (2017).
  • , Getting to the core of medicine: Developing undergraduate forensic medicine and pathology teaching, Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine, 52, (245), (2017).
  • , Why the conception of the doctor as applied scientist is inadequate, Medical Education, 47, 10, (956-957), (2013).
  • , The many layers of social in our science, Medical Education, 47, 1, (1-2), (2012).
  • , Confronting complexity: medical education, social theory and the ‘fate of our times’, Medical Education, 47, 1, (3-5), (2012).
  • , Doctors, science and society, Medical Education, 47, 1, (7-9), (2012).