Ethics and the New Engineer


Reports from the National Academy of Engineering have visualized The Engineer of 2020 (2004) and delineated Grand Challenges for Engineering (2008). The reports fall short, however, on plotting a clear course for the new engineer in contributing to the achievement of ethical and socially responsible outcomes. The Grand Challenges report, for example, scarcely mentions ethics, adopts a technocratic stance in equating social progress to technical progress, focuses to a great extent on large scale technological fixes, and argues that people must adapt to technological change (and not the other way around). This presentation will provide a critique of the reports (especially the Grand Challenges) and efforts of engineering educators and professional engineering societies in the wake of the reports; suggest a more dynamic characterization of the new engineer; and suggest approaches for formulating challenges for engineering that more effectively incorporate the social and ethical responsibilities of engineers and the engineering profession. In particular, the presentation will focus on developments in macroethics, social sustainability, and the unique challenges of emerging technologies. Featuring Joseph R. Herket, Lincoln Associate Professor of Ethics and Technology, Faculty of Interdisciplinary Humanities and Communication, School of Letters and Sciences, Associate Professor, Consortium for Science, Policy & Outcomes, Arizona State University.
Date:
March 03, 2014
Run time:
1:00:35
Categories:
Science Policy
Location:
ASU Washington Center, Washington, DC
Presented by:
Consortium for Science, Policy and Outcomes