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Featured researches published by Pj Philip Nickel.


Ethical Theory and Moral Practice | 2001

Moral Testimony and its Authority

Pj Philip Nickel

A person sometimes forms moral beliefs by relying on another persons moral testimony. In this paper I advance a cognitivist normative account of this phenomenon. I argue that for a persons actions to be morally good, they must be based on a recognition of the moral reasons bearing on action. Morality requires people to act from an understanding of moral claims, and consequently to have an understanding of moral claims relevant to action. A person sometimes fails to meet this requirement when she relies on another persons moral testimony, and so there are moral limits on such reliance.


Ethics and Information Technology | 2011

Ethics in e-trust and e-trustworthiness: the case of direct computer-patient interfaces

Pj Philip Nickel

In this paper, I examine the ethics of e-trust and e-trustworthiness in the context of health care, looking at direct computer-patient interfaces (DCPIs), information systems that provide medical information, diagnosis, advice, consenting and/or treatment directly to patients without clinicians as intermediaries. Designers, manufacturers and deployers of such systems have an ethical obligation to provide evidence of their trustworthiness to users. My argument for this claim is based on evidentialism about trust and trustworthiness: the idea that trust should be based on sound evidence of trustworthiness. Evidence of trustworthiness is a broader notion than one might suppose, including not just information about the risks and performance of the system, but also interactional and context-based information. I suggest some sources of evidence in this broader sense that make it plausible that designers, manufacturers and deployers of DCPIs can provide evidence to users that is cognitively simple, easy to communicate, yet rationally connected with actual trustworthiness.


Philosphy of Engineering and Technology | 2013

Trust in Technological Systems

Pj Philip Nickel

Technology is a practically indispensible means for satisfying one’s basic interests in all central areas of human life including nutrition, habitation, health care, entertainment, transportation, and social interaction. It is impossible for any one person, even a well-trained scientist or engineer, to know enough about how technology works in these different areas to make a calculated choice about whether to rely on the vast majority of the technologies she/he in fact relies upon. Yet, there are substantial risks, uncertainties, and unforeseen practical consequences associated with the use of technological artifacts and systems. The salience of technological failure (both catastrophic and mundane), as well as technology’s sometimes unforeseeable influence on our behavior, makes it relevant to wonder whether we are really justified as individuals in our practical reliance on technology. Of course, even if we are not justified, we might nonetheless continue in our technological reliance, since the alternatives might not be attractive or feasible. In this chapter I argue that a conception of trust in technological artifacts and systems is plausible and helps us understand what is at stake philosophically in our reliance on technology. Such an account also helps us understand the relationship between trust and technological risk and the ethical obligations of those who design, manufacture, and deploy technological artifacts.


Journal of Medicine and Philosophy | 2017

Sound Trust and the Ethics of Telecare

Sander Arthur Voerman; Pj Philip Nickel

The adoption of web-based telecare services has raised multifarious ethical concerns, but a traditional principle-based approach provides limited insight into how these concerns might be addressed and what, if anything, makes them problematic. We take an alternative approach, diagnosing some of the main concerns as arising from a core phenomenon of shifting trust relations that come about when the physician plays a less central role in the delivery of care, and new actors and entities are introduced. Correspondingly, we propose an applied ethics of trust based on the idea that patients should be provided with good reasons to trust telecare services, which we call sound trust. On the basis of this approach, we propose several concrete strategies for safeguarding sound trust in telecare.


Minds and Machines | 2013

Artificial Speech and Its Authors

Pj Philip Nickel

Some of the systems used in natural language generation (NLG), a branch of applied computational linguistics, have the capacity to create or assemble somewhat original messages adapted to new contexts. In this paper, taking Bernard Williams’ account of assertion by machines as a starting point, I argue that NLG systems meet the criteria for being speech actants to a substantial degree. They are capable of authoring original messages, and can even simulate illocutionary force and speaker meaning. Background intelligence embedded in their datasets enhances these speech capacities. Although there is an open question about who is ultimately responsible for their speech, if anybody, we can settle this question by using the notion of proxy speech, in which responsibility for artificial speech acts is assigned legally or conventionally to an entity separate from the speech actant.


Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics | 2006

Vulnerable Populations in Research: The Case of the Seriously Ill

Pj Philip Nickel


Ethical Theory and Moral Practice | 2007

Trust and obligation-ascription

Pj Philip Nickel


Philosophy and Phenomenological Research | 2010

Voluntary Belief on a Reasonable Basis

Pj Philip Nickel


Journal for The Theory of Social Behaviour | 2009

Trust, Staking, and Expectations

Pj Philip Nickel


Handbook of risk theory : epistemology, decision theory, ethics and social implications of risk | 2012

Risk and trust

Pj Philip Nickel; K Krist Vaesen

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A Andreas Spahn

Eindhoven University of Technology

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K Krist Vaesen

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Gunter Bombaerts

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Mpm Franssen

Delft University of Technology

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Peter Kroes

Delft University of Technology

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Sander Arthur Voerman

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Wolfgang Reitberger

Vienna University of Technology

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