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I'm interested in potentially studying engineering, specifically cybernetics and possibly robotics with machine learning or AI for assistive technology, probably with a focus on hygiene. Coming from a pure physics and math background, I have a rudimentary exposure to ethics mainly in the context of academic integrity and research (e.g. proper attribution, representing sources accurately, etc.) and beyond that only at a purely philosophical level. One reason I'm somewhat hesitant to venture into engineering is the prospect of confronting very real ethical quandaries (e.g. who claims responsibility for any significant damage(s) or even deaths that self-driving cars may cause, and how to know that this is right?) It occurs to me that, especially in engineering and applied math/physics, failure to adequately examine the ethical dimensions of work or possibly even exploratory research could significantly impede long term progress. Is there a consistent, if potentially complex, body of literature on technological ethics that all engineers should probably read at various stages of their careers, or is the field split in ways that are hard to reconcile (i.e. is it in effect necessary for engineers to specialize in their ethical outlook as well as their subject expertise?)

EDIT: to clarify my question, I'm wondering if there is a sort of ethics trivium that aspiring engineers should probably try to grapple with if they want to avoid otherwise well-documented ethics-related pitfalls, somewhat analogous to the rules and regulations that help engineers design and build safe machines and structures, or the "embedded ethics" of modern computer science curricula, or if ethics are deemed sacrosanct in a way that eludes any simple characterization.

TLDR
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Most engineering schools will offer an upper-division class in business ethics and contract law. The course I took 45 years ago focused on case studies of what engineers in the workplace should do when their managers tell them to do something unethical, and what their legal exposure is if they do it.

The simple part was contract law because it is a well-developed field with clear rules, lots of precedents, case law, and so on.

The hard part was unethical behavior in the workplace. Examples included falsifying experimental data logs (logging tests that were never performed, logging fails as passes, tampering with test equipment to get the parts to pass, inventing ways to trick the test equipment, and then hiding these acts from other workers to escape detection).

I would recommend that you go on-line and search course offerings with titles like business ethics for engineers, etc., take note what texts are required, and then order one and study it.

Another starting point would be to study the recent VW scandal around rigging the emissions control systems in their diesel cars so they only turned on during the EPA's qualification testing, and shut themselves off during normal driving .

niels nielsen
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If you are truly worried about this depth of ethical questions, to the level that it would keep you awake at night, the answer is simply "don't be an engineer."

The basic purpose of engineering is to "make stuff." Some of that stuff will fail, and some the failures will kill people.

Obviously, you can avoid "making stuff" that is intended to kill people by choosing your employers wisely. But anything can kill somebody, on a bad day. A small plastic kid's toy can kill someone just as "effectively" as an automatic-driving car or a rifle bullet. There aren't different "levels" of being dead.

Does that mean the engineer who designed the injection molding machine that made the plastic toy was unethical? If your personal philosophy (or your religion) says the answer is "yes", then find a different career.

alephzero
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Is there a consistent, if potentially complex, body of literature on technological ethics that all engineers should probably read at various stages of their careers?

TL;DR: No, to my knowledge.


Related modules

Engineering courses in all institutions that I've been involved had some modules which are related to either

  1. Engineering and its interaction with society
  2. Introductory courses to legal aspects of engineering.

To my experience the first (Engineering and its interaction with society) is in most cases philosophical (usually in the first semesters - and it is considered as a lighter in difficulty module).

The second (legal aspects of engineering) is something more related to informing engineers about legislative aspects of their profession. (I'll add that usually mostly it has to do with business and intellectual property law). This approach (as you can imagine) is totally different that ethics.


priorities in engineering syllabus

I'll also add that I've been involved in the forming and the update of an mechanical engineering syllabus (with group in mechatronics and robotics ). At no point in the process, did the legislation (much less ethics) became a priority in the discussion.

Unfortunately (in my case) the priority was to cover as much ground efficiently, in a set number of ECTS with limited resources (of course that might be different in larger institutions although I doubt it).


Legally permissible is not the same as ethical

The title of this section says it all. This is something that I've noticed in the world, when you are starting to look at details (and not so much sometimes).

Given that both legislation - and even ethics - can change its very difficult to teach (or more correctly to educate in the case of ethics).

Effect on society

Ethics is a very important of an individual's work. More so in Engineering that things are build (from inanimate objects such as houses to medical devices and automobiles) that affect human lives in a variety of ways.

Where does the ethical responsibility rest upon?

There have been some examples of exemplary engineering (e.g. von Braun's rockets) that has been used for destroying lives. However, that is not different in a significant way that a physicist's work has been used to develop the atomic bombs dropped in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

Sure, there were engineers that designed certain aspects, but there were also laymen that build and people that transported the bombs, or pulled the release trigger.

So this begs the question, "where does the ethical responsibly rest upon?"

In my view, each and every one of us has a responsibility for our actions. The greater, the potential for invention or contribution the greater the capacity for responsibility.


The special case of machine learning

In short this is a special case, because already the big companies have directors for AI ethics (please not that they lack directors on general ethics). This is something that people do care about, and you are probably going to get a more structured approach if you go down that road.

NMech
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