{"product_id":"libro-el-nacimiento-de-la-cliinica","title":"the birth of the clinic","description":"\u003cp\u003eWhat did a doctor see, in the mid-18th century, when observing the presence of disease in a patient's body? Undoubtedly, their methods and discourse still owed much to myth, beliefs, and imagination. By the end of that century, however, medicine underwent a radical change: the source of medical truth became the attentive eye, the careful perception that records spots, irregularities, hardness, color, adhesions. This empirical vigilance, born with the Enlightenment, became the new principle governing the relationship with the patient and presented itself as a guarantee of thoroughness and precision.\n\u003cbr\u003eThe Birth of the Clinic, published in France in 1963, is a revealing essay about medical observation and its methods during a brief but fruitful period in which, in clinical practice, the gaze became the criterion of truth and rationality. Until that moment, medical knowledge spoke a language without perceptual support. 'The new spirit (explains Michel Foucault) is nothing other than a syntactic reorganization of disease, in which the limits of the visible and the invisible follow a new trajectory.' Disease and even death, previously opaque, are now offered to the clarity of the gaze.\u003c\/p\u003e\u003cbr\u003e--\u003cbr\u003e\u003cp\u003eWhat did a doctor see, in the mid-18th century, when observing the presence of disease in a patient's body? Undoubtedly, their methods and discourse still owed much to myth, beliefs, and imagination. By the end of that century, however, medicine underwent a radical change: the source of medical truth became the attentive eye, the careful perception that records spots, irregularities, hardness, color, adhesions. This empirical vigilance, born with the Enlightenment, became the new principle governing the relationship with the patient and presented itself as a guarantee of thoroughness and precision.\n\u003cbr\u003eThe Birth of the Clinic, published in France in 1963, is a revealing essay about medical observation and its methods during a brief but fruitful period in which, in clinical practice, the gaze became the criterion of truth and rationality. Until that moment, medical knowledge spoke a language without perceptual support. 'The new spirit (explains Michel Foucault) is nothing other than a syntactic reorganization of disease, in which the limits of the visible and the invisible follow a new trajectory.' Disease and even death, previously opaque, are now offered to the clarity of the gaze.\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"Michel Foucault","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":43061004632312,"sku":"9789876290432","price":21.95,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":false}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0626\/4897\/5608\/products\/el-nacimiento-de-la-cliinica-michel-foucault-734873.jpg?v=1696464423","url":"https:\/\/ellector.com.pa\/es\/products\/libro-el-nacimiento-de-la-cliinica","provider":"Librerías El Lector Panamá","version":"1.0","type":"link"}