With its rise in popularity, work in the phenomenology of medicine has also attracted its fair share of criticism. One such criticism maintains that since the phenomenology of medicine does nothing but describe the experience of illness, it offers nothing we cannot obtain more easily by deploying simpler qualitative research methods. Fredrik Svenaeus has pushed back against this charge, insisting that the phenomenology of medicine not only describes but also defines illness. Although I agree with Svenaeus’s claim that the phenomenology of medicine does more than merely describe what it’s like to be ill, once we acknowledge its more far-reaching theoretical aspirations, we see that it faces an even more difficult set of objections. Taking a ...