Howard University, Washington, DC 20059, USA.
Sci Eng Ethics. 2013 Jun;19(2):599-623. doi: 10.1007/s11948-011-9332-9. Epub 2011 Dec 9.
Given the possibilities of synthetic biology, weapons of mass destruction and global climate change, humans may achieve the capacity globally to alter life. This crisis calls for an ethics that furnishes effective motives to take global action necessary for survival. We propose a research program for understanding why ethical principles change across time and culture. We also propose provisional motives and methods for reaching global consensus on engineering field ethics. Current interdisciplinary research in ethics, psychology, neuroscience and evolutionary theory grounds these proposals. Experimental ethics, the application of scientific principles to ethical studies, provides a model for developing policies to advance solutions. A growing literature proposes evolutionary explanations for moral development. Connecting these approaches necessitates an experimental or scientific ethics that deliberately examines theories of morality for reliability. To illustrate how such an approach works, we cover three areas. The first section analyzes cross-cultural ethical systems in light of evolutionary theory. While such research is in its early stages, its assumptions entail consequences for engineering education. The second section discusses Howard University and University of Puerto Rico/Mayagüez (UPRM) courses that bring ethicists together with scientists and engineers to unite ethical theory and practice. We include a syllabus for engineering and STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) ethics courses and a checklist model for translating educational theory and practice into community action. The model is based on aviation, medicine and engineering practice. The third and concluding section illustrates Howard University and UPRM efforts to translate engineering educational theory into community action. Multidisciplinary teams of engineering students and instructors take their expertise from the classroom to global communities to examine further the ethicality of prospective technologies and the decision-making processes that lead to them.
鉴于合成生物学、大规模杀伤性武器和全球气候变化的可能性,人类可能在全球范围内具备改变生命的能力。这场危机要求有一种伦理道德,为采取必要的生存全球行动提供有效的动机。我们提出了一个研究计划,旨在理解为什么伦理原则会随着时间和文化的变化而变化。我们还提出了一些临时的动机和方法,以就工程领域的伦理达成全球共识。目前,伦理学、心理学、神经科学和进化理论等跨学科研究为这些建议提供了依据。实验伦理学是将科学原理应用于伦理研究的一种方法,为制定推进解决方案的政策提供了一个范例。越来越多的文献提出了道德发展的进化解释。为了将这些方法联系起来,需要有一种实验或科学的伦理学,它故意检验道德理论的可靠性。为了说明这种方法的工作原理,我们将涵盖三个方面。第一部分根据进化理论分析了跨文化的伦理体系。尽管这类研究还处于早期阶段,但它的假设对工程教育产生了影响。第二部分讨论了霍华德大学和波多黎各大学/马亚圭斯分校(UPRM)的课程,这些课程将伦理学家与科学家和工程师聚集在一起,将伦理理论和实践结合起来。我们包括了工程和 STEM(科学、技术、工程和数学)伦理学课程的教学大纲,以及一个将教育理论和实践转化为社区行动的检查表模型。该模型基于航空、医学和工程实践。第三部分和结论部分说明了霍华德大学和 UPRM 将工程教育理论转化为社区行动的努力。工程专业学生和教师的多学科团队将他们的专业知识从课堂带到全球社区,进一步考察潜在技术的道德性以及导致这些技术的决策过程。