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The fluidity of biosocial identity and the effects of place, space, and time
- Source :
- Social sciencemedicine (1982). 198
- Publication Year :
- 2017
-
Abstract
- Public and scientific conceptions of identity are changing alongside advances in biotechnology, with important relevance to health and medicine. In particular, biological identity, once predominantly conceived as static (e.g., related to DNA, dental records, fingerprints) is now being recognized as dynamic or fluid, mirroring contemporary understandings of psychological and social identity. The dynamism of biological identity comes from the individual body's unique relationship with the world surrounding it, and therefore may best be described as biosocial. This paper reviews advances in scientific understandings of identity and presents a model that contrasts prior static approaches to biological identity from more recent dynamically-relational ones. This emerging viewpoint is of broad significance to health and medicine, particularly as medicine recognizes the significance of biography – i.e. the multiple, dense interactions imparted on a body across spatio-temporal dimensions – to phenotypic prediction, especially disease risk.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Spatial Analysis
Health (social science)
Geography
Social Identification
Identity (social science)
Biography
Models, Theoretical
Biosocial theory
3. Good health
Epistemology
Time
03 medical and health sciences
030104 developmental biology
History and Philosophy of Science
Disease risk
Relevance (law)
Humans
Sociology
Dynamism
Social identity theory
Mirroring
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 18735347
- Volume :
- 198
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Social sciencemedicine (1982)
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....11b9fc6555d686b1e6606daa960ad983