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dc.date.accessioned2023-11-10T17:47:29Z
dc.date.available2023-11-10T17:47:29Z
dc.date.created2023-08-29T13:50:19Z
dc.date.issued2023
dc.identifier.citationAdams, Jonathan . Defending explicability as a principle for the ethics of artificial intelligence in medicine. Medicine, Health care and Philosophy. 2023
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10852/105792
dc.description.abstractThe difficulty of explaining the outputs of artificial intelligence (AI) models and what has led to them is a notorious ethical problem wherever these technologies are applied, including in the medical domain, and one that has no obvious solution. This paper examines the proposal, made by Luciano Floridi and colleagues, to include a new ‘principle of explicability’ alongside the traditional four principles of bioethics that make up the theory of ‘principlism’. It specifically responds to a recent set of criticisms that challenge the supposed need for such a principle to perform an enabling role in relation to the traditional four principles and therefore suggest that these four are sufficient without the addition of explicability. The paper challenges the critics’ premise that explicability cannot be an ethical principle like the classic four because it is explicitly subordinate to them. It argues instead that principlism in its original formulation locates the justification for ethical principles in a midlevel position such that they mediate between the most general moral norms and the contextual requirements of medicine. This conception of an ethical principle then provides a mold for an approach to explicability on which it functions as an enabling principle that unifies technical/epistemic demands on AI and the requirements of high-level ethical theories. The paper finishes by anticipating an objection that decision-making by clinicians and AI fall equally, but implausibly, under the principle of explicability’s scope, which it rejects on the grounds that human decisions, unlike AI’s, can be explained by their social environments.
dc.description.abstractDefending explicability as a principle for the ethics of artificial intelligence in medicine
dc.languageEN
dc.rightsAttribution 4.0 International
dc.rights.urihttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.titleDefending explicability as a principle for the ethics of artificial intelligence in medicine
dc.title.alternativeENEngelskEnglishDefending explicability as a principle for the ethics of artificial intelligence in medicine
dc.typeJournal article
dc.creator.authorAdams, Jonathan
cristin.unitcode185,52,13,0
cristin.unitnameSenter for medisinsk etikk
cristin.ispublishedtrue
cristin.fulltextoriginal
cristin.qualitycode1
dc.identifier.cristin2170590
dc.identifier.bibliographiccitationinfo:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:ctx&ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info:ofi/fmt:kev:mtx:journal&rft.jtitle=Medicine, Health care and Philosophy&rft.volume=&rft.spage=&rft.date=2023
dc.identifier.jtitleMedicine, Health care and Philosophy
dc.identifier.doihttps://doi.org/10.1007/s11019-023-10175-7
dc.type.documentTidsskriftartikkel
dc.type.peerreviewedPeer reviewed
dc.source.issn1386-7423
dc.type.versionPublishedVersion
dc.relation.projectNFR/324278


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