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The aesthetic approach to people with dementia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 June 2014

Julian C. Hughes*
Affiliation:
Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust and Newcastle University, UK Email: julian.hughes@ncl.ac.uk

Extract

The question I wish to consider is: how do we approach people with dementia? I want to suggest that the approach we take should be the aesthetic one. I shall need to say what this is. My question is not an empirical one. I am not asking how we actually approach people with dementia. My question has an ethical bent to it: how ought we to approach people with dementia? In asking this question, however, I am not after an explanation suggesting we should act with kindness, compassion, honesty, integrity and so forth. We ought to do all these things, of course, and I hope such virtues will flow from the account I shall give. But I am really after something somewhat deeper, a philosophical understanding of what it is to be a person with dementia and, consequently, how we ought to stand as human beings in relation to this person.

Information

Type
Guest Editorial
Copyright
Copyright © International Psychogeriatric Association 2014