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A hybrid bottom-up and top-down approach to machine medical ethics
theory and data
pp. 93-110
Abstract
The perceived weaknesses of philosophical normative theories as machine ethic candidates have led some philosophers to consider combining them into some kind of a hybrid theory. This chapter develops a philosophical machine ethic which integrates "top-down" normative theories (rule-utilitarianism and prima-facie deontological ethics) and "bottom-up" (case-based reasoning) computational structure. This hybrid ethic is tested in a medical machine whose input-output function is treated as a simulacrum of professional human ethical action in clinical medicine. In six clinical medical simulations run on the proposed hybrid ethic, the output of the machine matched the respective acts of human medical professionals. Thus, the proposed machine ethic emerges as a successful model of medical ethics, and a platform for further developments.
Publication details
Published in:
van Rysewyk Simon, Pontier Matthijs (2015) Machine medical ethics. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 93-110
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-08108-3_7
Full citation:
van Rysewyk Simon (2015) „A hybrid bottom-up and top-down approach to machine medical ethics: theory and data“, In: S. Van Rysewyk & M. Pontier (eds.), Machine medical ethics, Dordrecht, Springer, 93–110.