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12 - Science applied

Ethics and engineering

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2012

Adam Briggle
Affiliation:
University of North Texas
Carl Mitcham
Affiliation:
Colorado School of Mines
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Summary

The final chapter once again expands appreciation of the ethical dimensions of science, this time into the domain of engineering. Expansion is justified insofar as engineering is a kind of applied science – although that is not all it is. Additionally, all scientific research is increasingly dependent on engineered instrumentation to form the interactive technoscience that founds the contemporary human-built world. Scientific engineers who have been at the forefront of constructing this world have also been leaders in ethical reflection on professional responsibilities. Codes of ethics for engineers, for instance, anticipated codes of ethics for scientists by more than half a century. Considering the ethics–engineering relationship is thus useful both to help place the ethics–science relationship in perspective and to stimulate further reflection on that relationship.

Setting the stage: the Challenger and Columbia disasters

After the Manhattan Project, one of the most iconic and important fusions of science and engineering was the US Apollo program, launched in a 1961 speech by President John F. Kennedy when he announced the goal of “landing a man on the moon” by the end of the decade. Scientists and engineers worked together to design a vehicle and sociotechnical system capable of accomplishing a politically defined goal. The Cold War successor to the Apollo program was created in 1972 when President Richard Nixon announced that NASA (the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration) would develop a permanent space station and reusable shuttle to provide regular service between it and Earth. The original vision was of a shuttle that would be, not just politically but also commercially, beneficial and provide regular service by the mid-1980s.

Type
Chapter
Information
Ethics and Science
An Introduction
, pp. 290 - 318
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2012

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References

Goodell, Jeff 2010 How to Cool the Planet: Geoengineering and the Audacious Quest to Fix Earth’s ClimateBostonHoughton MifflinGoogle Scholar
Kintisch, Eli 2010 Hack the Planet: Science’s Best Hope – or Worst Nightmare – for Averting Climate CatastropheHoboken, NJJohn Wiley & SonsGoogle Scholar
Launder, BrianThompson, Michael 2010 Geo-Engineering Climate Change: Environmental Necessity or Pandora’s Box?Cambridge University Press
McDonald, AllanHansen, James 2009 Truth, Lies, and O-Rings: Inside the Space Shuttle Challenger DisasterTallahassee, FLUniversity Press of FloridaGoogle Scholar
Pinkus, Rosa LynnShuman, LarryHummon, NormanWolfe, Harvey 1997 Engineering Ethics: Balancing Cost, Schedule, and Risk – Lessons Learned from the Space ShuttleCambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Vaughan, Diane 1996 The Challenger Launch Decision: Risky Technology, Culture, and Deviance at NASAUniversity of Chicago PressGoogle Scholar

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