4.2 Article

Teasing out Artificial Intelligence in Medicine: An Ethical Critique of Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning in Medicine

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOETHICAL INQUIRY
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages 121-139

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11673-020-10080-1

Keywords

Artificial intelligence; Machine learning; Ontology; Epistemology; Ethics; Medical practice

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The rapid integration of artificial intelligence in medicine introduces potential advantages and challenges for patients and physicians, involving issues of ontology, epistemology, and morality. The unclear legal relationship between AI and its users highlights the need for ongoing discourse and iterative development of future care models.
The rapid adoption and implementation of artificial intelligence in medicine creates an ontologically distinct situation from prior care models. There are both potential advantages and disadvantages with such technology in advancing the interests of patients, with resultant ontological and epistemic concerns for physicians and patients relating to the instatiation of AI as a dependent, semi- or fully-autonomous agent in the encounter. The concept of libertarian paternalism potentially exercised by AI (and those who control it) has created challenges to conventional assessments of patient and physician autonomy. The unclear legal relationship between AI and its users cannot be settled presently, an progress in AI and its implementation in patient care will necessitate an iterative discourse to preserve humanitarian concerns in future models of care. This paper proposes that physicians should neither uncritically accept nor unreasonably resist developments in AI but must actively engage and contribute to the discourse, since AI will affect their roles and the nature of their work. One's moral imaginative capacity must be engaged in the questions of beneficence, autonomy, and justice of AI and whether its integration in healthcare has the potential to augment or interfere with the ends of medical practice.

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