Abstract

When should we use care robots? In this paper we endorse the shift from a simple normative approach to care robots ethics to a complex one: we think that one main task of a care robot ethics is that of analysing the different ways in which different care robots may affect the different values at stake in different care practices. We start filling a gap in the literature by showing how the philosophical analysis of the nature of healthcare activities can contribute to (care) robot ethics. We rely on the nature-of-activities approach recently proposed in the debate on human enhancement, and we apply it to the ethics of care robots. The nature-of-activities approach will help us to understand why certain practice-oriented activities in healthcare should arguably be left to humans, but certain (predominantly) goal-directed activities in healthcare can be fulfilled (sometimes even more ethically) with the assistance of a robot. In relation to the latter, we aim to show that even though all healthcare activities can be considered as practice-oriented, when we understand the activity in terms of different legitimate ‘fine-grained’ descriptions, the same activities or at least certain components of them can be seen as clearly goal-directed. Insofar as it allows us to ethically assess specific functionalities of specific robots to be deployed in well-defined circumstances, we hold the nature-of-activities approach to be particularly helpful also from a design perspective, i.e. to realize the Value Sensitive Design approach.

Highlights

  • A revolution in healthcare is before us, one that involves the introduction of robots both in the surgical suite and throughout the rest of the institution

  • When should we use care robots? In this paper we endorse the shift from a simple normative approach to care robots ethics to a complex one: we think that one main task of a care robot ethics is that of analysing the different ways in which different care robots may affect the different values at stake in different care practices

  • We rely on the nature-of-activities approach recently proposed in the debate on human enhancement, and we apply it to the ethics of care robots

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Summary

Introduction

A revolution in healthcare is before us, one that involves the introduction of robots both in the surgical suite and throughout the rest of the institution. While aware of the important differences between these traditions, with our approach based on the conceptual analysis of action, we aim to make sense of the respective relevance for care activities of (care) values highlighted in these different traditions, i.e. the realization of carers skill and a meaningful relationship between carer and patient (Vallor 2011), the patient’s dignity (Sharkey 2014) and the patient’s moral autonomy (Sorell and Draper 2014); we want to explore the possibility of some reconciliation between these values under some circumstances This reference to different philosophical traditions with their own specific language requires us to establish some clear terminological convention to avoid confusion. In the rest of the paper, we will: (1) give a general definition of care robots, (2) present the nature-of-activities approach, (3) apply the nature-of-activities approach to the ethics of using care robots with reference to two particular examples of care activities (lifting and urine sample collection), (4) present the design relevance of this approach through the analysis of one particular example of a care robot (the ‘‘wee-bot’’), (5) draw some conclusions and set the stage for future research

What is a Care Robot?
Care Activities and Care Robots
Lifting Under Different Descriptions
The Design Perspective
Where Does this Bring Us?
Full Text
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