Ethics CT II Answer Key 20.9.18
Ethics CT II Answer Key 20.9.18
Ethics CT II Answer Key 20.9.18
PART A
1. State the theories about right action.
Right actions are the ones that produce the greatest satisfaction of the preferences of the affected
persons.
2. Mention the models of professional roles.
Saviour,Guardian,Bureaucratic Servant,Social Servant,Social Enabler and Catalyst,Game Player
3. Self-interest generally refers to a focus on the needs or desires (interests) of the self. A number of
philosophical, psychological, and economic theories examine the role of self-interest in motivating
human action. State the significance of Self Interest.
4. What is meant by ethical egoism?
Ethical egoism is the normative ethical position that moral agents ought to do what is in their own
self-interest.
5. State the importance of ethical codes.
A well-written code of conduct clarifies an organization's mission, values and principles, linking them
with standards of professional conduct.
6. What is mean by engineering as experimentation?
A test under controlled conditions that is made to demonstrate a known truth, to examine the validity
of a hypothesis, or to determine the efficacy of something previously untried.
7. Differentiate scientific experiments and engineering projects.
The Scientific Method The Engineering Design Process
State your question Define the problem
Do background research Do background research
Formulate your hypothesis, identify Specify requirements
variables
Design experiment, establish procedure Create alternative solutions, choose the best one and
develop it
8. Define ethical conventionalism.
Conventionalism is the philosophical attitude that fundamental principles of a certain kind are
grounded on (explicit or implicit) agreements in society, rather than on external reality.
9. What do you understand by balanced outlook on law?
A balanced outlook on law A Balanced Outlook on Law emphasis the necessity of law and regulation
and their limitations in governing engineering practice.
10. Mention some universally accepted ethical principles.
Respect for the dignity of persons is the most fundamental and universally found ethical principle
across geographical and cultural boundaries, and across professional disciplines.
PART B
11. a) Briefly explain the three main levels of moral development, developed by Laurence
Kohlberg.
This theory is a stage theory. In other words, everyone goes through the stages sequentially
without skipping any stage.
13. a) What do you mean by Learning from past? Discuss with examples.
CASE STUDY: THE CHALLENGER
What happened?
The orbiter of the Challenger had three main engines fuelled by liquid hydrogen. The fuel was
carried in an external fuel tank which was jettisoned when empty. During lift-off, the main
engines fire for about nine minutes, although initially the thrust was provided by the two
booster rockets.
Or
b) How can engineer become a responsible experimenter? Highlight the code of ethics for
Engineers.
Although the engineers facilitate experiments, they are not alone in the field. Their
responsibility is shared with the organizations, people, government, and others.
The engineer, as an experimenter, owe several responsibilities to the society, namely,
1. A conscientious commitment to live by moral values.
2. A comprehensive perspective on relevant information. It includes constant awareness of the
progress of the experiment and readiness to monitor the side effects, if any.
3. Unrestricted free-personal involvement in all steps of the project/product development
(autonomy).