This document introduces the key topics that will be covered in the study of engineering ethics. It discusses how engineers receive little training in ethics but often face ethical dilemmas. The purpose is to help engineers address ethical problems they may encounter. Some key points introduced are the distinction between personal and professional ethics, how engineering involves managing unknowns, and how ethical problem solving is similar to engineering design problems. Case studies will be used including issues related to the Ford Pinto.
This document introduces the key topics that will be covered in the study of engineering ethics. It discusses how engineers receive little training in ethics but often face ethical dilemmas. The purpose is to help engineers address ethical problems they may encounter. Some key points introduced are the distinction between personal and professional ethics, how engineering involves managing unknowns, and how ethical problem solving is similar to engineering design problems. Case studies will be used including issues related to the Ford Pinto.
This document introduces the key topics that will be covered in the study of engineering ethics. It discusses how engineers receive little training in ethics but often face ethical dilemmas. The purpose is to help engineers address ethical problems they may encounter. Some key points introduced are the distinction between personal and professional ethics, how engineering involves managing unknowns, and how ethical problem solving is similar to engineering design problems. Case studies will be used including issues related to the Ford Pinto.
This document introduces the key topics that will be covered in the study of engineering ethics. It discusses how engineers receive little training in ethics but often face ethical dilemmas. The purpose is to help engineers address ethical problems they may encounter. Some key points introduced are the distinction between personal and professional ethics, how engineering involves managing unknowns, and how ethical problem solving is similar to engineering design problems. Case studies will be used including issues related to the Ford Pinto.
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Introduction
Achmad Adyatma Ardi
Objectives • Know why it is important to study engineering ethics • Understand the distinction between professional and personal ethics • See how ethical problem solving and engineering design are similar 1.1 Background Ideas • During their undergraduate education, engineers receive training in basic and engineering sciences, problemsolving methodology, and engineering design, but generally receive little training in ethics. • The purpose of this book is to provide a text and a resource for the study of engineering ethics and to help future engineers be prepared for confronting and resolving ethical dilemmas, such as the design of an unsafe product like the Pinto, that they might encounter during their professional careers. 1.2 Why study engineering ethics ? • Increased awareness of importance due to publicity surrounding high profile engineering failures. • Engineering decisions can impact public health, safety, business practices and politics. • Engineers should be aware of moral implications as they make decisions in the workplace. 1.3 Engineering is managing the unknown • One source of the ethical issues encountered in the course of engineering practice is a lack of knowledge. • This is by no means an unusual situation in engineering. Engineers often encounter situations in which they don’t have all of the information that is needed. By its nature, engineering design is about creating new devices and products • When something is new, many questions need to be answered. How well does it work? How will it affect people? What changes will this lead to in society? How well will this work under all of the conditions that it will be exposed to? Is it safe? If there are some safety concerns, how bad are they? What are the effects of doing nothing? The answers to these questions are often only partly known • Really, as an engineer you can never be absolutely certain that your design will never harm anyone or cause detrimental changes to society. But you must test your design as thoroughly as time and resources permit to ensure that it operates safely and as planned. Also, you must use your creativity to attempt to foresee the possible consequences of your work. 1.4 Personal vs Professional ethics • . Personal ethics deals with how we treat others in our day-to-day lives. Many of these principles are applicable to ethical situations that occur in business and engineering. • However, professional ethics often involves choices on an organizational level rather than a personal level. Many of the problems will seem different because they involve relationships between two corporations, between a corporation and the government, or between corporations and groups of individuals. Frequently, these types of relationships pose problems that are not encountered in personal ethics. 1.5 The origins of ethical thought • originated in the philosophy of the ancient Greeks and their predecessors • developed through subsequent centuries by many thinkers in the Judeo–Christian tradition. Interestingly, non- Western cultures have independently developed similar ethical principles. • Although for many individuals, personal ethics are rooted in religious beliefs, this is not true for everyone. Certainly, there are many ethical people who are not religious, and there are numerous examples of people who appear to be religious but who are not ethical. 1.6 Ethics dan the law • We should also mention the role of law in engineering ethics. The practice of engineering is governed by many laws on the international, federal, state, and local levels. • There is also a distinction between what is legal and what is ethical. Many things that are legal could be considered unethical. For example, designing a process that releases a known toxic, but unregulated, substance into the environment is probably unethical, although it is legal. • Conversely, just because something is illegal doesn’t mean that it is unethical. For example, there might be substances that were once thought to be harmful, but have now been shown to be safe, that you wish to incorporate into a product. If the law has not caught up with the latest scientifc findings, it might be illegal to release these substances into the environment, even though there is no ethical problem in doing so 1.7 Ethics problems are like design problems • The essence of engineering practice is the design of products, structures, and processes. The design problem is stated in terms of specifcations: A device must be designed that meets criteria for performance, aesthetics, and price. Within the limits of these specifcations, there are many correct solutions. There will, of course, be some solutions that are better than others in terms of higher performance or lower cost. Frequently, there will be two (or more) designs that are very different, yet perform identically. • Ethical problem solving shares these attributes with engineering design. Although there will be no unique correct solution to most of the problems we will examine, there will be a range of solutions that are clearly right, some of which are better than others. There will also be a range of solutions that are clearly wrong. 1.8 Case studies • Ford pinto