Beyond the Anonymous Case: Integrating Sacred Epistemology and Name-Centered Healing Practice

Review Article


Abstract views: 8 / PDF downloads: 5

Authors

  • Julian Ungar-Sargon

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.58372/2835-6276.1338

Keywords:

Medical education, humanization, patient-centered care, narrative medicine, cultural competence, medical humanities, therapeutic relationship, sacred epistemology, naming practices, Jewish mysticism, medical anthropology, clinical reasoning, physician-patient communication, professional identity formation, healthcare quality

Abstract

Contemporary medical education's reliance on anonymized case-based learning, while fostering clinical reasoning skills, systematically dehumanizes patients by reducing complex individuals to diagnostic categories and statistical abstractions. This pedagogical approach undermines the relational foundations essential for authentic healing practice.

To propose and theoretically ground a transformative educational framework that integrates proper names, cultural narratives, and sacred epistemology into medical curricula while maintaining scientific rigor and clinical competence.

This theoretical analysis synthesizes scholarship from medical humanities, anthropological studies of naming practices, Jewish mystical traditions (particularly Kabbalistic concepts of tzimtzum and tikkun olam), narrative medicine research, and patient-centered care literature. The framework draws upon phenomenological approaches to clinical practice and post-Holocaust theological reflections on presence and absence in healing relationships.

The proposed name-centered medical education model demonstrates how attention to proper names serves as a gateway to recognition, cultural competence, and therapeutic presence. Key components include: (1) humanized case presentations incorporating personal narratives and cultural contexts; (2) onomastic education addressing the anthropology and spiritual significance of naming practices; (3) development of "recognition competence" as a core clinical skill; and (4) integration of sacred epistemology that honors both empirical evidence and irreducible human particularity. Evidence from patient-centered care research, neuropsychological studies of name recognition, and narrative medicine outcomes supports the clinical effectiveness of these approaches.

Name-centered medical education represents a practical pathway toward "sacred medicine" that honors both scientific knowledge and human dignity. This approach addresses physician burnout, enhances patient satisfaction, and restores medicine's covenantal nature while maintaining technical excellence. Implementation requires comprehensive curricular reform, faculty development, and organizational commitment to recognizing the sacred dimensions inherent in all healing encounters.

Healthcare providers trained in name-centered approaches demonstrate enhanced empathy, cultural competence, and therapeutic effectiveness. Patients experience greater satisfaction, improved adherence to treatment, and better clinical outcomes when their individual identities and cultural contexts are recognized and honored within clinical encounters.

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Published

2025-09-19

How to Cite

Julian Ungar-Sargon. (2025). Beyond the Anonymous Case: Integrating Sacred Epistemology and Name-Centered Healing Practice: Review Article. American Journal of Medical and Clinical Research & Reviews, 4(9), 1–25. https://doi.org/10.58372/2835-6276.1338

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