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ECE390

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... number of books to borrow and 'Science and Engineering Ethics' journal on line ... others; you just have to put them in quotes and give the references; see above. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ECE390


1
ECE390 Ethics, Professionalism and Current
Issues
  • Erik D. Goodman
  • 2308M Engineering
  • goodman_at_egr.msu.edu

2
What well discuss in this class - Ethics
  • How is ethics developed?
  • Is ethics different between individuals,
    religions, cultures?
  • What does the law have to do with ethics? Is it
    enough to guide our decisions?
  • What is moral autonomy?
  • Are decisions always obvious? What are ethical
    dilemmas?
  • Some tools for analysis of ethical dilemmas case
    studies

3
What well discuss in this class - Professionalism
  • What is a professional?
  • Is this a good thing?
  • Are there more rights and obligations for
    professionals?
  • Are engineers professionals?
  • How do professionals differ in communication
    styles, and how can we communicate more
    effectively with people whose styles differ from
    our own?
  • Role of professional organizations.
  • What is the Engineering Code of Ethics, how is it
    applied and how is it enforced?

4
What well discuss in this class Current Issues
  • How and which current problems affect engineers
    and require their decisions?
  • Technology creates new complex problems that
    require both a moral and a technological approach
  • Case studies
  • Invention and monopolies Microsoft and US, EU,
    Apple, others.
  • Biomedical advancements research, invention,
    medical policy, medicine.
  • Relationships with employers Mobility of
    employees, ownership of knowledge, whistle
    blowing.
  • Working in a global environment. Do you have the
    same ethics and attitude as the other members of
    your team in India, Brazil, China and Italy?
  • Engineering and the environment. How important is
    it?

5
I visited this guy in London, July, 2007, to
prepare for ECE 390Weird guyWho? Why?
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How well study ethics and professionalism
  • Your instructor
  • Erik D. Goodman, EB2308M, Tel. 355-6453, email
    goodman_at_egr.msu.edu.
  • Class meets Fridays, 910 - 1000pm, EB1234.
  • Office Hours MWF 1120-1200 or by appointment
    (email scheduling works best), or just dropping
    in. Office hours may change.

12
More about the class
  • Attendance is required. Each unexcused absence
    from the class above three will result in 5
    subtracted from the grade, and more than 6
    unexcused absences will result in a zero grade.
    Absences may be excused by providing the reason
    for the absence (for example, job interview with
    company XXX in YYY) at least a day in advance in
    an email to the instructor (goodman_at_egr.msu.edu)
    or by showing an excused absence form from the
    Olin Health Center after the absence. The
    Ombudsmans site (http//www.msu.edu/unit/ombud/at
    tendance.html) has a comprehensive discussion of
    university policy on attendance.
  • Students with Disabilities will have all the
    accommodations determined by the Resource Center
    for Persons with Disabilities. The instructor
    should be notified during the first week of
    classes of such requirements.

13
About the papers
  • .

Essays and grading There will be three essays
youll have to write in this class. Theyll be
assigned two weeks before they are due, and each
will constitute one third of your grade There
will be a few outside lecturers, established
professionals on their fields. Their lectures
will be useful for the essays you will have to
write, giving you thoughts and information
outside what youll find in textbooks. Be sure to
take notes. The essays in this class will be
relatively short, but they have to be well
organized and presented. Discussions not to the
point leave less space for analysis and result in
a lower grade.
14
About referencing/citing
  • References in your essays have to be of archival
    nature. This means that published journals and
    newspapers can be used, in addition to books,
    even if they are available on the internet. On
    the other hand, somebodys blog, or even
    Wikipedia articles, change often and are not
    acceptable as authorities to cite, even if they
    are useful sources of information in your
    research. But be sure not to incorporate such
    material directly without citation!
  • Some newspaper references are available to
    college students. For example, the New York
    Times allows unlimited access on line to old
    editions, free to those with a .edu email
    address. MSUs library website has a number of
    books to borrow and Science and Engineering
    Ethics journal on line (as well as others).

15
What NOT to do
  • Plagiarism and cooperation on assignments.
  • Neither is acceptable.
  • Any plagiarism incident will bring the
    heaviest possible repercussions. Cite any
    sources you use. Your analyses in your essays
    should be your own, as potentially influenced by
    what you read, discuss, etc.
  • Fortunately there are software programs that will
    find commonalities of any given paper with a lot
    of sources and other papers. Note that you can,
    of course, use work and texts of others you just
    have to put them in quotes and give the
    references see above.

16
A typical essay Implantable defibrillator
  • Medical Devices save lives, or at least improve
    lives of people. Often there is a rush to bring
    newly developed devices to the market, to satisfy
    both the shareholders of the medical devices
    company and the publics need for the devices.
    Withdrawing a medical device for technical
    problems may cause distrust of the public,
    deprive patients that need it, and create
    financial problems for the company. In the
    attached article one such case is discussed.
  • You are to write an essay of 1200-1500 words on
    the subject and hand in a printed version, as
    well as email it to goodman_at_egr.msu.edu.
  • Find what has been written on the subject.
  • Research the technical issues and studies on the
    subject, as well as the role of government
    agencies and of competitors.
  • Give archival referencese.g., an article in a
    journal or a newspaper (with an author) is valid,
    even if found on the web. A web-based discussion
    may not be there tomorrow, and often the author
    cannot be traced. Somebodys views carry less
    weight than hard facts, unless these views affect
    the facts.
  • Analyze the ethical issues that the project
    engineer faces
  • Define the ethical dilemmas,
  • Analyze the decisions to be made from the
    viewpoint of the IEEE Code of Ethics,
  • Analyze the decisions to be made, using either a
    consequentialist or a deontological ethical
    theory.
  • The paper will be graded on the data presented,
    the analysis of the problem based on ethical
    theories, and the completeness and quality of the
    discussion, not on personal views and arguments.

17
Morality and Ethics
  • Concerns the goodness of voluntary human conduct
    that affects the self or other living things
  • Morality (Latin mores) usually refers to any
    aspect of human action
  • Ethics (Greek ethos) commonly refers only to
    professional behavior

18
Why study ethics?
  • To responsibly confront moral issues raised by
    technological activity
  • To recognize and resolve moral dilemmas
  • To achieve moral autonomy

19
An example
  • One who breaks an unjust law must do so openly,
    lovingly, and with a willingness to accept the
    penalty. I submit that an individual who breaks a
    law that conscience tells him is unjust and
    willingly accepts the penalty is in reality
    expressing the highest respect for the law. Rev.
    Martin Luther King, Jr. in Letter from a
    Birmingham Jail, 1963.

20
Moral Dilemmas
  • Situations in which two or more moral
    obligations, duties, rights, or ideals come into
    conflict.
  • To resolve we must identify the factors, gather
    facts, rank moral considerations, consider
    alternative courses of actions, and arrive at a
    judgment.

21
A Classical Moral Dilemma

A 5 people on the track, cant escape trolley B
1 person on the alternate track, cant escape
trolley IF you throw the switch What should you
do? (I.e., what is the ETHICAL or MORAL thing
for you to do?)
YOU
A
B
22
A Second Classical Moral Dilemma
A 5 people on the track, cant escape trolley B
1 very large person on a bridge with you over
the track if you push him off onto the track,
his body will stop the trolley and save the 5
people your body wouldnt be big enough to do
that. What should you do? (I.e., what is the
ETHICAL or MORAL thing for you to do?)

B
YOU
A
23
Stages of Moral Development
  • Pre-conventional LevelWhatever benefits oneself
    or avoids punishment
  • Conventional LevelUncritical acceptance of
    societys rules
  • Post-conventional LevelMoral autonomy

24
Moral Autonomy
  • Autonomous individuals think for themselves and
    do not assume that customs are always right.
  • They seek to reason and live by general
    principles.
  • Their motivation is to do what is morally
    reasonable for its own sake, maintaining
    integrity, self-respect, and respect for others.

25
ECE 390
  • Lecture Two
  • ? / ?
  • How do we develop our ethics?
  • Whose happiness matters?

26
What Are We After?
  • To establish ethical standards for engineers,
    what is needed
  • Agreement across ???, ???, ???, ???
  • Lip service to professional ethics?
  • Where do our ethical principles really come from?

27
Stages of Moral Development (Review)
  • Pre-conventional LevelWhatever benefits oneself
    or avoids punishment
  • Conventional LevelUncritical acceptance of
    societys rules
  • Post-conventional LevelMoral autonomy

28
Moral Autonomy(Review)
  • Autonomous individuals think for themselves and
    do not assume that customs are always right
  • They seek to reason and live by general
    principles
  • Their motivation is to do what is morally
    reasonable for its own sake, maintaining
    integrity, self-respect, and respect for others

29
Moral Responsibility
  • Morality concerns the goodness of voluntary human
    activity that impacts the self or other living
    beings
  • Assuming we have not deliberately allowed
    ourselves to remain ignorant, powerless, or
    indifferent, we have complete moral
    responsibility for what we do with adequate
    knowledge, freedom, and approval

30
The Existence of Right and Wrong
  • Principle Certain aspects of right and wrong
    exist objectively, independent of culture or
    personal opinion
  • Accepting this principle is essential for ethics
    to discern an objective reality rather than just
    define a subjective standard
  • But cultures, religions, families, etc., provide
    different interpretations and mandate different
    behaviors

31
Where Did YOUR Ethics Come From?
  • _______________
  • _______________
  • _______________
  • What does ethics concern/govern?

32
Are Your Ethics Fixed and Immutable, or Still
Developing?
33
  • Are your ethics a set of (?)
  • Rules (Never or Always)?
  • Duties? (One should always act such that), etc.?
  • Rights? (Every person has a right to No person
    should have to )?
  • Virtues? (A good person acts )
  • Based solely on OUTCOMES? (Maximizing the
    happiness, minimizing the misery of people?)
  • Is there ever a justification for breaking
    these rules, not fulfilling these duties,
    violating these rights, abandoning these virtues,
    accepting worse outcomes? If so, how is the
    situation evaluated?

34
How Does a Culture Influence Ethics?
  • Socialism vs. capitalism
  • Autocracy vs. democracy
  • Patriotism vs. diversity of opinion
  • ???

35
Global Teaming
  • What basis is there for forging trust and mutual
    assistance in a team with diverse
    backgrounds/beliefs?

36
Hope for Agreement?
  • Differences are many
  • Are there commonalities around our society?
    Around the globe?

37
Platos Four Main Virtues
  • Prudence (mind) to think about a moral problem
    clearly and completely
  • Temperance (emotions) control attraction to
    positive emotions
  • Fortitude (emotions) control aversion for
    negative emotions
  • Justice (will) choose according to truth and
    fairness.

38
God and Ethics
  • Can one be ethical without a belief in God?
    Independent of a belief in God?
  • If not, how deal with differences among
    religions, cultures, re religious teachings?

39
When working across cultures
  • What do you expect to see?
  • How SHOULD YOU behave?
  • How should you expect THEM to behave?
  • What would you hope to be true?
  • Is there a basis for SHARED expectations?
  • Is there hope for establishing a code of
    professional ethics that can be accepted globally?
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