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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Veronica M. F. Adamson (University of Edinburgh, UK)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.430kg ISBN: 9781138635227ISBN 10: 1138635227 Pages: 192 Publication Date: 06 September 2017 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews'This is a beautiful, visceral and not least courageous text that opens the reader the depths and details of a human life facing death. Adamson succeeds in offering a poignant reflection that journeys from diagnosis to death in such a way that is faithful to the shared depths of the lifeworld. As such, she generously provides a moving and insightful narrative for contemplation about what it is to be human and the nature of the lifeworld in living towards death. It should be read by all professionally involved in terminal illness, it spans insights into well-being, aesthetic dimensions of illness and the implicit splits between reductionist approaches in care delivery and human embodiment which are all skilfully revealed and grasp the human heart.' Kathleen Galvin, University of Brighton, UK 'Every now and then a book comes along that makes you sit up and acknowledge that there is a whole other world going on out there. This is one. It is about is about the death from ovarian cancer of Adamson's partner, Jane. Sounded like the usual stuff-illness, death, bereavement. But not if it is viewed though the lens of German Idealism, which looks at the notion of life as a binary synthesis, or a return enhanced, as a way of coming to understand death. I noticed the letters in the words before me had become a bit blurred. I retreated to Google for some background illumination and found a University of Glasgow thesis on binary synthesis, or Goethe's aesthetic intuition in literature and science. Binary synthesis, it told me, is the principle uniting Goethe's science with his art, in which the name of one element in a pair of antitheses can fairly be applied to their synthesis, since it represents a richer concept, tending towards one of the original antitheses in an ascending hierarchy. I got out of that and did a cryptic crossword-at least they're relatively straightforward. Binary synthesis, the back cover told me, describes the interplay between dynamically opposing pairs of concepts-such as life and death-resulting in an enhanced version of one of them to move forward in a new cycle of the process. This book is an examination of the experience of caring for someone from diagnosis to death, illustrated with examples of the return enhanced. That made a little more sense, but I still felt out of my depth. I mean...I thought I knew a bit about cancer and dying and stuff... Veronica Adamson originally trained as a nurse and is now an Honorary Fellow in the School of Health in Social Science at the University of Edinburgh.' Roger Woodruff 'This is a beautiful, visceral and not least courageous text that opens the reader the depths and details of a human life facing death. Adamson succeeds in offering a poignant reflection that journeys from diagnosis to death in such a way that is faithful to the shared depths of the lifeworld. As such, she generously provides a moving and insightful narrative for contemplation about what it is to be human and the nature of the lifeworld in living towards death. It should be read by all professionally involved in terminal illness, it spans insights into well-being, aesthetic dimensions of illness and the implicit splits between reductionist approaches in care delivery and human embodiment which are all skilfully revealed and grasp the human heart.' Kathleen Galvin, University of Brighton, UK 'Every now and then a book comes along that makes you sit up and acknowledge that there is a whole other world going on out there. This is one. It is about is about the death from ovarian cancer of Adamson’s partner, Jane. Sounded like the usual stuff—illness, death, bereavement. But not if it is viewed though the lens of German Idealism, which looks at the notion of life as a binary synthesis, or a return enhanced, as a way of coming to understand death. I noticed the letters in the words before me had become a bit blurred. I retreated to Google for some background illumination and found a University of Glasgow thesis on binary synthesis, or Goethe's aesthetic intuition in literature and science. Binary synthesis, it told me, is the principle uniting Goethe’s science with his art, in which the name of one element in a pair of antitheses can fairly be applied to their synthesis, since it represents a richer concept, tending towards one of the original antitheses in an ascending hierarchy. I got out of that and did a cryptic crossword—at least they’re relatively straightforward. Binary synthesis, the back cover told me, describes the interplay between dynamically opposing pairs of concepts—such as life and death—resulting in an enhanced version of one of them to move forward in a new cycle of the process. This book is an examination of the experience of caring for someone from diagnosis to death, illustrated with examples of the return enhanced. That made a little more sense, but I still felt out of my depth. I mean…I thought I knew a bit about cancer and dying and stuff… Veronica Adamson originally trained as a nurse and is now an Honorary Fellow in the School of Health in Social Science at the University of Edinburgh.' Roger Woodruff Author InformationVeronica M. F. Adamson is an Honorary Research Fellow in the School of Health in Social Science, University of Edinburgh, UK. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |