Questions:
§ 90: When he distinguishes codes of knowledge; interested in the distinction between the linguistic structure of the sign and the aleatory structure of the case.
a. Interested in why he can think this distinction because it is categorically weird, feels like a category mistake.
§ 93: Also getting clearer on distinction in first question. Relationship between sign/signifier and symptom.
b. What is the French translation for ‘codes of knowledge,’ what is the code? (90)
§ 93: relationship between signs and symptoms; “In its material reality, the sign is identified with the symptom…”
c. Taking the symptom and elevating it to the level of the sign and on another part, seems like the symptoms are separate, getting sign off symptom.
§ Tracking signs and symptoms with regards to nosological and anatomo-clinical view of sign and symptom?
d. Chapters 1-3 Nosological view
e. Chapters 4-7 Transition period of clinic, no anatomy
f. Chapters 8-10 Anatomo-clinical view
g. What is the threshold (in our reading, chapter 6) and how to characterize?
§ 97-98: The transition to what we later know MF will discuss in terms of disciplinary power “This conceptual transformation was decisive…Medicine no longer tried to see the essential truth beneath the sensible individuality…”
h. Disciplinary power and MF: its individualizing, or normalizing because it individualizes; can we read it as the opposite? Is there an anonymization happening in this reduction? What is the role of anonymity and individuation in this new structure of the medical gaze?
§ 104-105: Relationship between the two codes; similar first question but referencing pages.
i. Classical archaeology: have two seemingly different things and part of the argument there is this depth knowledge such that you learn that they are both doing the same thing even though they look different.
Discussion:
(89) Distinction between aleatory gaze and linguistic structure. Take this linguistic structure to be an account of how signs come to be structured and how cases come to be structured.
The case comes to assigned a probability and the sign comes to be assigned.
Aleatory: probabilistic, more up to chance; reference to the taming of chance that is happening at this time. Going from chance = randomness, to chance = structured probability.
Looking at the patient and the patient’s chart, and the patient is a case, looking at in terms of their probabilities; probabilities of getting a certain disease, etc. Seeing the symptoms in terms of probability.
Before, it has a pure observing and tracking of the essence of before, why this was an ideal space, and now we are viewing in terms of not having an essence.
(90): “New objects were to present themselves to the medical gaze in the sense that…”
(96-104): Linguistic structure of the sign
Medicine reorganizing itself as signs—symptoms as a sign for what? The doctors questioning shifts and the two codes of knowledge, domains of knowledge are what allow us to understand a depth condition of knowledge. MF wants to better understand what appears initially and what kind of conditions allow for that.
Disease-gaze relationship tracking as a from of knowledge and savior allowing for these aspects to be known. The symptom starts functioning as a sign. (93)
Here it almost looks like we’re bringing the symptom itself into some kind of relationship where it becomes a sign. MF doesn’t want to necessarily equate them but the sign says the same thing which is the symptom.
(91) Is he describing a different kind of recognition? It’s not one that has anything to offer knowledge.
At this moment not super critical of visibility/invisibility but there is a reference this shift.
Invisibility as a deterrent to knowledge, and a different kind of obfuscation from before, has a deceitful quality to it. The gaze is now contending with what is hidden or masked. Less of this tension playing between visibility and invisibility.
Seems like they are intentionally opposed.
(90-91) You do not see the disease; you see its symptoms. These are available to reason only, never exposed to the senses. This would be a problem for the empiricist structure of medicine at this point. When you would look at measles, for example, you would think that was the disease which isn’t how we view it now.
Focus on what show through a symptom, and a symptom becomes a sign for something else.
Deduction vs induction and step towards induction, this is what something is essentially, this is its idealized space, type of view. You can have a cough but that can be many different things.
(92) “By this simple opposition to the forms of help…”
Both totality and difference in relation to disease. You know something is not disease X because it doesn’t have the right symptoms.
(93) “Every symptom as a sign and every sign is a symptom.”
Every sign as a symptom makes sense; you wouldn’t look at a patient and assume they are the disease itself.
How is every sign a symptom?
Calculating the age or other demographics as the sign? Reference to earlier mention of regional training for medical doctors. How is that still not able to exhaust reality of a sign?
The fact that you live near a river…is a sign, not a symptom, but still has a specific relation to a disease. Ex: You’re by the chemical plant, that’s a sign of exposure.
There is a particular relationship between the doctor and the disease MF referencing here. Also thinking there might be something here in the exhausting of reality, where the symptom is taken up as a sign, but the sign, combined with probabilistic language, changes.
More of in a falsifying than verifying language. Example of Kuhn: paradigm shifts as happening because of solving puzzles that appear to scientist. MF giving an account of the shift in medical gaze but is there a logic to that? Kuhn would reference the structure of revolutions; view of the medical gaze as changing due to the attempt to solve problems.
Archaeology: what’s the form?
Genealogy: how the formation?
In archaeology, Foucault is not asking the same questions as Kuhn. Not trying to account for its formation yet. Genealogy shows there is all this—including Kuhn puzzle solving—going on.
(94-95) isn’t this the dream of all doctors, total transparency and an ability to see any and all things ailing a patient who comes in.
Still here prior to germ theory; they’re noticing something beneath the skin, that is “invisible,” is the real disease whereas we wouldn’t say it is invisible now. We can see it under a microscope.
(68) use of spontaneous in relation to the form
Morphology vs formation? What is the shape vs how did it form, what was the process?
Signification of symptom makes sense with the aleatorization of the case. Thinking certainly in relation to signs would be problematic; but is certainty still a regulative ideal? The dream of the serene, accomplished form of scientific knowledge seems it would be exhaustive. Certainty, in terms of absolute certainty, you have to give up as soon as you allow probabilistic thinking.