Abstract
In a world marked by technological acceleration, sociopolitical unrest, and ecological disruption, nursing faces growing fragmentation—of systems, relationships, and meaning. This paper re-envisions holistic nursing not merely as a clinical approach but as an ontological and ethical philosophy of wholeness that sustains nursing's identity amid such complexity. Drawing upon Lonergan's interiority as a foundation for moral awareness, Ubuntu's relational ontology, and Foucault's critique of surveillance and power, the paper develops a philosophical framework that reconnects the nurse's being and action. It proposes that the nurse's moral presence arises from interior reflection and relational accountability, enabling resistance to reductionist and algorithmic forces that dehumanize care. By viewing the nurse as a contemplative witness and ethical actor within fragmented systems, this framework invites a return to nursing's core calling—to honor human dignity, cultivate presence, and nurture authentic relationship as the essence of healing. This renewed philosophy of wholeness offers guidance for nursing education, practice, and policy in an era increasingly defined by disconnection.
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