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Dec 03, 2024
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ENGRG 3600 - Ethical Issues in Engineering Practice (crosslisted) PHIL 2471 , STS 3601 (KCM-AG, SBA-AG) Spring. 3 credits. Student option grading (no audit).
Prerequisite: For engineering students, completion of one First-Year Writing Seminar (FWS). For engineering students, enrollment limited to: sophomores, juniors, and seniors.
T. S. Goetze.
This course surveys a range of ethical issues that arise in professional engineering, and provides discussion-based practice in analyzing and addressing them. Using normative frameworks from professional codes, philosophical ethics, value-sensitive design, feminist theory, and science & technology studies, the course engages with a series of historical, current, and fictional case studies, across a wide variety of engineering disciplines. Specific topics to be discussed may include: privacy, consumer rights, smart cities, geoengineering, artificial intelligence, and cloning. Instruction is through a mix of lectures and discussions.
Outcome 1: Be familiar with and able to identify a range of ethical and social issues in professional and academic engineering practice.
Outcome 2: Understand some of the major normative theories in philosophy, science and technology studies, feminist theory, and other approaches.
Outcome 3: Be able to apply normative theories to specific cases in engineering, from a variety of different stakeholder perspectives, including the perspectives of historically marginalized social groups.
Outcome 4: Be able to analyze, evaluate, and produce normative arguments using evidence and techniques of philosophical argument.
Outcome 5: Have improved their research skills and written communication skills, particularly in argumentative writing.
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