Ethics in Ethics in Engineering: Case Study: Ford Pinto
Ethics in Ethics in Engineering: Case Study: Ford Pinto
ETHICS IN ENGINEERING
San Francisco State University School of Engineering Fall 2007
compete with foreign import models that had better gas mileage rushed to have it available to the public faster
Problem:
Ford knew that the gas tank would explode if hit at >20mph from rear
Problem avoided
Rationale
Cost analysis: the cost of installing the part was be higher than the damage resulting from fatalities
Resolution
Ford eventually did recall the Pinto voluntarily to save their reputation
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Engineering Ethics
The Space Shuttle Challenger Engineering Ethical Issue The Challenger was launched in extremely cold weather ld th An O-ring failed because of the cold Engineers recommended that the launch be delayed Management overruled the engineers Ethical issue or accident?
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NASA billed the shuttle as reliable and inexpensive NASA was under pressure by competitor, European Space Agency Previous mission had been delayed numerous times by both weather and mechanical failures
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With the available data, there seemed to be no correlation between temperature and corrosion l ti b t t t d i Manager to Engineer:
Take off your engineering hat and put on your management hat.
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Should a product be released when it hasnt been tested over all expected operational conditions? When the data is inconclusive, which way should the decision go?
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Goal is to train you to analyze complex problems May require analysis using ethical theories Correct answer to an ethical problem may not be obvious May involve conflicting ethical principles
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Many laws are based on ethical principles and others on practical issues Engineers are minimally safe following laws Engineering beyond Enginee ing ethics seeks to go be ond the dictates of the law Our interest is in solving conflict with ethics where there is no legal guidance
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Codes serve as a starting point for ethical decision making Principles and standards accepted by the engineering practice
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Duty Ethics
Duties should be performed regardless of whether these acts lead to the most good
Rights Ethics
Emphasizes that we all have moral rights and any action that i l t th i ht is thi ll t bl violates these rights i ethically unacceptable The ultimate overall good of the actions is not taken into account
Virtue Ethics
Regards actions as right that manifest good character traits Regards actions as bad that display bad character traits Focuses on the type of person we should strive to be
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Utilitarianism
Emphasis on well-being of society as a whole, not of the individual Ignores needs of individuals Cost-Benefit analysis often used
Projects with the highest ratio of benefits to costs will be implemented
Implementation depends greatly on knowing what will lead to the most good.
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Duty Ethics
Immanuel Kant (1724-1804)
Formulated duty ethics Moral duties are fundamental Right and wrong can be determined by reason
Once duties are recognized, the ethically correct moral actions are obvious People have duties, one of which is to protect the rights of others
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Rights Ethics
Formulated by John Locke (1632-1704) Actions are good that respect the rights of the individual Humans have the right to life, liberty, and property People have fundamental rights that other people have a duty to respect
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Virtue Ethics
Interested in determining what kind of people we should be l h ld b Defined as moral distinction and goodness Actions are considered right if they support good character traits Actions are considered wrong if they support bad character traits Closely tied to personal character
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Use judgment for the best choice possible with the information available at the time
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Consequences
Illegal, subject to laws Anti-competitive and corrupts our free-market i t economic system
Gifts are usually of nominal value and are just a form of advertising
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