Abstract The
impact of AI technology on healthcare is an evolving issue in the medical
humanities. Eric Topol, in Deep Medicine:
How Artificial Intelligence Can Make Healthcare Human Again, observes that
innovative technology gives medical
professionals a framework through which they can nurture the “human bond,” allowing
them to practice what he calls “deep medicine.” In Kazuo
Ishiguro’s novel Klara
and the Sun, the Nobel laureate envisions a world in
which AI can work miracles. I argue that the AI protagonist’s empathetic interaction
with humans and her endeavors in searching for a cure for her owner/friend
performs a special version of deep medicine. The android, with her belief in faith, hope, love and her unwavering
loyalty, stands in contrast to the lonely, despairing, and
fickle human characters, offering to nourish and heal the
dystopic and divided fictional universe that can very well be our
future.
Keywords: AI, medical humanities, deep
medicine, Kazuo Ishiguro, Klara and the Sun
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