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9781444330946

Ethics, Technology, and Engineering An Introduction

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  • ISBN13:

    9781444330946

  • ISBN10:

    1444330942

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2011-05-02
  • Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
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Summary

Featuring a wide range of international case studies, Ethics, Technology, and Engineering presents a unique and systematic approach for engineering students to deal with the ethical issues that are increasingly inherent in engineering practice. Utilizes a systematic approach to ethical case analysis -- the ethical cycle -- which features a wide range of real-life international case studies including the Challenger Space Shuttle, the Herald of Free Enterprise and biofuels. Covers a broad range of topics, including ethics in design, risks, responsibility, sustainability, and emerging technologies Can be used in conjunction with the online ethics tool Agora ( http://www.ethicsandtechnology.com) Provides engineering students with a clear introduction to the main ethical theories Includes an extensive glossary with key terms

Author Biography

Ibo van dc Poel is Associate Professor in Ethics and Technology at Delft University of Technology. He is an associate editor of the Handbook of' Philosophy of Technology and the Engineering Sciences (2009) and co-editor or Philosophy and Engineering (2010). He is project leader of the VCI project "New Technologies as Social Experiments: Conditions for Morally Responsible Experimentation" sponsored by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsp. x
Introductionp. 1
The Responsibilities of Engineersp. 6
Introductionp. 7
Responsibilityp. 9
Passive Responsibilityp. 10
Active Responsibility and the Ideals of Engineersp. 13
Technological enthusiasmp. 14
Effectiveness and efficiencyp. 16
Human welfarep. 18
Engineers versus Managersp. 21
Separatismp. 21
Technocracyp. 22
Whistle-blowingp. 23
The Social Context of Technological Developmentp. 25
Chapter Summaryp. 28
Study Questionsp. 29
Discussion Questionsp. 30
Codes of Conductp. 31
Introductionp. 32
Codes of Conductp. 33
Professional codesp. 34
Corporate codesp. 40
Possibilities and Limitations of Codes of Conductp. 43
Codes of conduct and self-interestp. 44
Vagueness and potential contradictionsp. 46
Can ethics be codified?p. 48
Can codes of conduct be lived by?p. 50
Enforcementp. 52
Codes of Conduct in an International Contextp. 54
Global codes for multinationalsp. 54
Global codes for engineersp. 58
Chapter Summaryp. 61
Study Questionsp. 62
p. 63
Normative Ethicsp. 65
Introductionp. 67
Ethics and Moralityp. 70
Descriptive and Normative Judgmentsp. 71
Points of Departure: Values, Norms, and Virtuesp. 72
Valuesp. 72
Normsp. 74
Virtuesp. 75
Relativism and Absolutismp. 75
Normative relativismp. 76
Absolutismp. 76
Ethical Theories77
Utilitarianismp. 78
Jeremy Benthamp. 79
Mill and the freedom principlep. 84
Criticism of utilitarianismp. 86
Applying utilitarianism to the Ford Pinto casep. 88
Kantian Theoryp. 89
Categorical imperativep. 90
Criticism of Kantian theoryp. 93
Applying Kant's theory to the Ford Pinto casep. 95
Virtue Ethicsp. 95
Aristotlep. 96
Criticism of virtue ethicsp. 98
Virtues for morally responsible engineersp. 99
Care Ethicsp. 102
The importance of relationshipsp. 102
Criticism of care ethicsp. 103
Care ethics in engineeringp. 103
Applied Ethicsp. 105
Chapter Summaryp. 106
Study Questionsp. 107
Discussion Questionsp. 108
Normative Argumentationp. 109
Introductionp. 110
Valid Argumentsp. 113
Deductive and Non-Deductive Argumentsp. 116
Arguments in Ethical Theoriesp. 118
Argumentation by analogyp. 118
Arguments in a utilitarian fleap. 119
Argumentation in Kantian reasoningp. 122
Argumentation in virtue-ethical reasoningp. 126
Fallaciesp. 127
Some common fallacies in ethical discussionsp. 127
Fallacies of riskp. 129
Chapter Summaryp. 131
Study Questionsp. 131
Discussion Questionsp. 132
The Ethical Cyclep. 133
Introductionp. 134
Ill-Structured Problemsp. 135
The Ethical Cyclep. 137
Moral problem statementp. 138
Problem analysisp. 142
Options for actionsp. 143
Ethical evaluationp. 145
Reflectionp. 146
An Examplep. 147
Moral problem statementp. 149
Problem analysisp. 150
Options for actionsp. 151
Ethical evaluationp. 151
Reflectionp. 153
Collective Moral Deliberation and Social Arrangementsp. 155
Chapter Summaryp. 157
Study Questionsp. 158
Discussion Questionsp. 159
Ethical Questions in the Design of Technologyp. 161
Introductionp. 163
Ethical Issues During the Design Processp. 165
Problem analysis and formulationp. 166
Conceptual designp. 168
Simulationp. 170
Decisionp. 171
Detail designp. 173
Prototype development and testingp. 174
Manufacture and constructionp. 175
Trade-offs and Value Conflictsp. 177
Cost-benefit analysisp. 180
Multiple criteria analysisp. 183
Thresholdsp. 185
Reasoningp. 187
Value Sensitive Designp. 188
A comparison of the different methodsp. 189
Regulatory Frameworks: Normal and Radical Designp. 190
Chapter Summaryp. 194
Study Questionsp. 194
Discussion Questionsp. 197
Designing Moralityp. 198
Introductionp. 199
Ethics as a Matter of Thingsp. 200
Technological Mediationp. 201
Mediation of perceptionp. 202
Mediation of actionp. 204
Moralizing Technologyp. 205
Criticizing the moral character of technological artifactsp. 206
Taking mediation into ethicsp. 207
Designing Mediationsp. 211
Chapter Summaryp. 214
Study Questionsp. 215
Discussion Questionsp. 216
Ethical Aspects of Technical Bisksp. 217
Introductionp. 219
Definitions of Central Termsp. 221
The Engineer's Responsibility for Safetyp. 223
Risk Assessmentp. 227
We reliability of risk assessmentsp. 227
When are Risks Acceptable?p. 228
Informed consentp. 231
Do the advantages outweigh the risks?p. 232
The availability of alternativesp. 233
An: risks and benefits justly distributedp. 234
Risk Communicationp. 236
Dealing with Uncertainty and Ignorancep. 237
The precautionary principlep. 238
Engineering as a societal experimentp. 241
Chapter Summaryp. 244
Study Questionsp. 245
Discussion Questionsp. 247
The Distribution of Responsibility in Engineeringp. 249
Introductionp. 250
The Problem of Many Handsp. 252
The CitiCorp buildingp. 253
Causes of the problem of many handsp. 256
Distributing responsibilityp. 257
Responsibility and the Lawp. 258
Liability versus regulationp. 259
Negligence versus strict liabilityp. 260
Corporate liabilityp. 263
Responsibility in Organizationsp. 263
Responsibility Distributions and Technological Designsp. 267
Chapter Summaryp. 272
Study Questionsp. 273
Discussion Questionsp. 274
Sustainability, Ethics, and Technologyp. 277
Introductionp. 278
Environmental Ethics?p. 280
Environmental Problemsp. 281
Sustainable Developmentp. 283
The Brundtland definitionp. 283
Moral justificationp. 284
Operationalizationp. 286
Can a Sustainable Society be Realized?p. 289
Engineers and Sustainabilityp. 291
Points of attention during the design processp. 292
Life cycle analysisp. 293
Chapter Summaryp. 298
Study Questionsp. 299
Discussion Questionsp. 300
Engineering Qualifications and Organizations in a Number of Countriesp. 301
NSPE Code of Ethics for Engineersp. 307
FEANI Position Paper on Code of Conduct: Ethics and Conduct of Professional Engineersp. 313
Shell Code of Conductp. 315
DSM Values and Whistle Blowing Policyp. 320
Glossaryp. 329
Referencesp. 340
Index of Casesp. 351
Indexp. 352
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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