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  1. Three paradoxes of medical diagnosis.G. William Moore & Grover M. Hutchins - 1987 - Theoretical Medicine and Bioethics 2 (2):197-215.
    Sadegh-zadeh [23] has proposed a theory of the relativity of medical diagnosis in terms of the time at which a diagnosis is accepted, the patient to whom the diagnosis applies, the physician who renders the diagnosis, the medical knowledge used, the diagnostic method applied, and the set of patient observations. Use of classical formal logic as the diagnostic method may result in three paradoxes: the paradoxes of consistency, completeness, and justifiable ignorance. These paradoxes may be resolved by the addition of (...)
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  • Three paradoxes of medical diagnosis.G. William Moore & Grover M. Hutchins - 1981 - Metamedicine 2 (2):197-215.
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