In this chapter, we ask if care robots can care. The standard and indeed intuitive response to such a question is no. This response is premised on the argument that care requires internal cognitive and emotional states that robots lack. We explore arguments that belie this conclusion. We argue that care robots may participate in the creation of caring environments through certain types of expressive movement, irrespective of the existence of internal emotional states or intentions. We address three possible objections to this argument and argue that none of them is lethal to our hypothesis. Finally, we examine evidence that despite phenomenological similarity, such human–robot interactions are not neurologically equivalent to human–human in...
Background Robots are seen as one of the possibilities to provide care to older people, especially w...
An ageing population, increasing longevity and below-replacement fertility increase the care burden ...
Embodied theories of mind tend to be theories of the cognitive half of the mind and to ignore its em...
In this chapter, we ask if care robots can care. The standard and indeed intuitive response to such ...
In this article we examine the possible challenges facing the use of the concept of « care » or « ta...
Care robots are likely to perform increasingly sophisticated caring activities that some will consid...
Twenty-five years ago, robotics guru Joseph Engelberger had a mission to motivate research teams all...
Abstract A computer carefully executes its program, with the right operations all in the right orde...
Should we deploy social robots in care settings? This question, asked from a policy standpoint, requ...
This article examines how the interactive capabilities of companion robots, particularly their mater...
Social roboticists conduct their inquiries out of necessity—every robot they design incorporates and...
Ethical issues raised by the idea of social robots that care point at a fundamental difference betwe...
The increasing pressure on healthcare systems calls for innovative solutions, such as social robots....
When should we use care robots? In this paper we endorse the shift from a simple normative approach ...
To date, ethical critiques of the use of assistive healthcare robotics have not closely examined the...
Background Robots are seen as one of the possibilities to provide care to older people, especially w...
An ageing population, increasing longevity and below-replacement fertility increase the care burden ...
Embodied theories of mind tend to be theories of the cognitive half of the mind and to ignore its em...
In this chapter, we ask if care robots can care. The standard and indeed intuitive response to such ...
In this article we examine the possible challenges facing the use of the concept of « care » or « ta...
Care robots are likely to perform increasingly sophisticated caring activities that some will consid...
Twenty-five years ago, robotics guru Joseph Engelberger had a mission to motivate research teams all...
Abstract A computer carefully executes its program, with the right operations all in the right orde...
Should we deploy social robots in care settings? This question, asked from a policy standpoint, requ...
This article examines how the interactive capabilities of companion robots, particularly their mater...
Social roboticists conduct their inquiries out of necessity—every robot they design incorporates and...
Ethical issues raised by the idea of social robots that care point at a fundamental difference betwe...
The increasing pressure on healthcare systems calls for innovative solutions, such as social robots....
When should we use care robots? In this paper we endorse the shift from a simple normative approach ...
To date, ethical critiques of the use of assistive healthcare robotics have not closely examined the...
Background Robots are seen as one of the possibilities to provide care to older people, especially w...
An ageing population, increasing longevity and below-replacement fertility increase the care burden ...
Embodied theories of mind tend to be theories of the cognitive half of the mind and to ignore its em...