02 EM 471 - Lecture - 02 - Dec - 27 - 2020
02 EM 471 - Lecture - 02 - Dec - 27 - 2020
02 EM 471 - Lecture - 02 - Dec - 27 - 2020
EM 471
Engineering Ethics and Professional Conduct
Lecture 02
Introduction to engineering ethics and professionalism
purpose of studying professional ethics, engineering as a
profession: historical and social context
Semester I, 2020|2021
23 November, 2020 ~ 19 March, 2021
27 December, 2020
Ethics as Relating to Engineering
2
What is a Profession?
•No universally accepted definition, but one
good working definition is:
A number of individuals in the same
occupation, voluntarily organized to
earn a living by openly serving a
moral ideal in a morally permissible
way, beyond what law, market,
morality, and public opinion would
otherwise require 3
Profession (Cont.)
A number of individuals
Earn a living
6
Becoming a Professional Engineer
Understand that Engineering is a Profession
Become familiar with the Code of Ethics of
your discipline
Join Student Engineering Societies
Join other Professional Organizations
– ACM
• ACM Code of Ethics
12
Ethical Behaviors Expected of the Computer Professional
Respects confidentiality;
3. Act-Utilitarianism
Analyzes each action to determine if it
increases utility
What is a “profession”?
What is “ethics”?
What is “professional ethics”?
Ethical theories
Thinking about professional ethics
Professional values
Codes of Ethics
21
Two Valid Moral Positions
The first is “Kantianism”
Kant: Right or wrong regardless
of consequences
The second is “Utilitarianism”
Utilitarianism: Right or wrong
depending on consequences
Most people agree with both
positions
22
Profession
25
“Professionalism”
1. Skill, competency in work
2. Relational element – work will be
beneficial to others
Work itself doesn’t have moral status
Execution of work has moral status
26
Recognizing when We’re in the
Realm/Kingdom of Ethics
Watch the language:
Right and wrong
- Actions
goals
27
Professional Ethics
Purpose… Helps professional decide
when faced with a problem that raises a
moral issue
28
Ethics and Morality
Morality – making choices with
reasons
30
Morality and Ethics
Professional Morality – what we do
in our occupational lives
31
Ethics and Law
Law – the authority is external
Ethics – the authority is internal
Much of law, but not all, is based in
morality
Sometimes law is unethical
Much of what is ethical is unaddressed
by legal rules
32
Professional Ethics and Law
34
Professional Ethics and Law
Be very careful not to assume that
there is a legal rule for every
situation. Often the gaps between
legal rules require one to switch to
an ethical analysis.
35
Ethics
Descriptive ethics – “What IS”
Prescriptive ethics – “What OUGHT
to be”
36
Descriptive to Prescriptive
Two very different ways of
reasoning. Descriptive, or
scientific, studies of professional
ethics help us identify issues that
need to be included in Code of
Ethics and in educational
programs. Gives us our “case
studies”.
37
Prescriptive Ethics
“What OUGHT to be”
The words used are different…
good-bad, right-wrong, just-unjust
Thought processes use values,
goods, virtues, rules, ethical
theories, moral reasons, moral
explanations, and moral decisions.
38
Why the Interest in
Professional Ethics?
1. As occupations become more
specialized, the ethical issues become
more specialized
2. Professional societies have increased
efforts to establish ethical codes to
guide members
3. Increasing public scrutiny, lack of
traditional deference
4. Regulatory oversight, public protection
39
Moral Reasoning
Machinery of Prescriptive Ethics
1. Rules – e.g. “always tell the truth”
40
Prescriptive Ethics
Judgments should be
“universalizable” or “generalizable”
41
Moral Relativism
Ethical values are relative to time,
place and culture
Moral beliefs are subjective and
arbitrary
“It’s all a matter of personal
opinion”
Decisions shift easily
42
Moral Absolutism
Ethical values completely objective
Unchangeable, universal, no
exceptions
Comparatively inflexible
Neither position tenable.
43
Objectivity
Codes of ethics require objectivity,
which means that there are
principles and values outside of the
individual that the members of the
community share and that
individuals will be measured against.
“Thinking reasonably is thinking
morally.” - Samuel Johnson
44
Reasonable Person -- Peer
What would the reasonable peer do
in the circumstances?
Reasonable person: mature, sane,
sober, well-informed, well-
intentioned, open-minded, calm,
detached but empathetic …
45
Moral Decisions
Reasons explain a decision:
46
A Moral Reason
Is general, not particular or
contingent
reason, not instinct or external
authority
not selfishness
moral value, not economic, legal,
social value
47
Moral Explanation
At least one of the reasons
justifying a decision is a moral
reason.
48
Dilemma
Explanation 1
Reason + Reason + … Decision 1
Explanation 2
Reason + Reason + … Decision 2
49
Non-Moral Dilemma
1. I should work late and finish the work I
promised I’d finish.
50
Moral Dilemma
Moral Explanation 1
Moral reason + reason +… = Decision 1
Moral Explanation 2
Moral reason + reason + … = Decision 2
51
Resolution of Dilemmas
Some dilemmas are resolved because
they are not moral dilemmas.
Some MORAL dilemmas can be resolved
through a creative third alternative that
satisfies both moral outcomes.
Or, possible to sequentially act on each
one.
Or, evaluation will show which is
strongest moral explanation and decision.
52
Evaluate Moral Reasons
STRONG WEAK
relevant to decision tends to be
concern with irrelevant
person(s) most not concerned
affected by decision with person(s)
focussed on values most affected by
of central decision
importance emphasizes
peripheral values
53
Evaluate Moral Explanations
STRONG WEAK
use several narrow focus
perspectives selective concern
(consequences, fewer values
motives, rights,
virtues, etc.)
considers all
persons
many values
54