The modern version used for this essay was written by Louis Lasagna, in 1964, he was the Academic Dean of the School of Medicine at Tufts University, till date it is used by many medical schools. Most physician
Finally, offered for your consideration is The Hippocratic Oath – Modern Version, written in 1964 by Louis Lasagna, Academic Dean of the School of Medicine at Tufts University, and used in many medical schools today. Please compare and contrast Dr. Lasagna’s version of medical ethics with tha...
I argue that a Hippocratic oath for mathematicians is suitable as an individual but unsuited as a structural interven- tion for current mathematical practices. This refines the calls for such oaths (Sample, 2019; Lott, 2004; Davis, 1988) and the doubt about their efficacy expressed in (Mül...
Contrary to popular belief, the words "first, do no harm" don't appear in the original Hippocratic oath,Dr. Robert H. Shmerling, former clinical chief of the division of rheumatology at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and current corresponding faculty member at Harvard Medical School, wrot...
Inspired by the Modern Hippocratic Oath and the Obligation of the Engineer.SigningWe have a list of public signatures in the SIGNATURES file.If you wish to sign, please add your username and the current commit hash to the end of the SIGNATURES file (leaving a newline after your addition),...
In his version, Etzioni says AI practitioners should remember their own humanity, avoid playing God, and “prevent harm whenever it can.” Etzioni’s oath ends with: “I will remember that I am not encountering dry data, mere zeros and ones, but human beings, whose interactions with my AI...
By that logic, AI programmers must take a version of the Hippocratic oath that promises to do no harm, through their creations, to the society that they’re building and supporting. The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) recognizes this and has recently issued theACM Code of Ethics and...