Lecture 2 - Ethics
Lecture 2 - Ethics
Lecture 2 - Ethics
Engineering Management II
Professional Ethics
1.0 Introduction
Ethics may be explained as:
Ethics deals with what we believe to be good or bad and with the moral obligations that
these beliefs imply.
Ethics is a set of moral values and principles which form the standards guiding the code of
conduct of individuals, organizations and professions.
Ethics is the rules or standards governing the conduct of a person or the members of a
profession: medical ethics.
2.0 Code of Ethics
Express the rights, duties, and obligations of the members of the profession.
Provides framework for arriving at good ethical choices.
May not be comprehensive, but all inclusive.
Codes of ethics are written by specific groups of people for specific groups of people, each
group having its own purpose for existence and its own means of accomplishing its purpose.
Codes of ethics are to be reflections of the morally permissible standards of conduct which
members of a group make binding upon them.
Your code of ethics defines your responsibilities to society and the environment, your
employer or client, and your fellow engineers.
Code of Ethics
code of ethics means sets of standards for engineers' obligations to the public, their clients,
employers and the profession encompassing right conduct.
3.0 Professional Ethics
Personal and professional ethics are different from, but not exclusive of, each other. There is always
overlap between professional and personal ethics. However, professional ethics is more restrictive than
Personal ethics.
The figure below shows the relationships of courtesy, ethics, codes of ethics and laws.
Interaction Rules
4.0 Integrity
Integrity overlaps among the phenomena of morality, ethics and legality.
Integrity is thus not about good or bad, or right or wrong, or what should or should not be.
Integrity provides powerful access to increased performance for individuals, groups, or
organizations.
Morality, ethics and legality exist in a realm of virtues (high behaviour standard).
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Morality, ethics and legality are about good and bad, right and wrong, or what should or
should not be.
5.0 Engineering Ethics
Engineering ethics is professional ethics, as opposed to personal morality. It sets the standards for
professional practice. It is an essential part of professional education because it helps students deal with
issues they will face in professional practice.
Engineering Ethics is the study of moral issues and decisions confronting individuals and organizations
engaged in engineering.
The institutionalization of engineering ethics is a social necessity due to the fact that the
actions of engineers can have such enormous impact on the lives of individuals, states,
cultures, the environment, and the entire planet.
It is necessary to develop with rigor and depth a concept of ethics and responsibility
commensurate with our immense technological powers in order to advance to a safer and
more just world.
Purpose of engineering ethics is to increase the skill of moral judgment and to develop the moral
autonomy of the engineer. The other purpose is to improve the skills necessary to think critically about
the ethical aspects and consequences of engineering design and work.
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To increase knowledge about the duties, obligations and moral responsibilities of engineers
in the practice of their professional labour.
To promote the knowledge and development of professional virtues in order to produce
excellent engineers that is committed to, and contributes to, social progress and social
justice.
5.3 Engineering Ethics: What? Why? How? and When?
Engineering ethics is professional ethics, as opposed to personal morality. It sets the
standards for professional practice,
It is an essential part of professional education because it helps students deal with issues
they will face in professional practice.
a. Morality
Morality refers to those standards of conduct that apply to everyone rather than only to
members of a special group. Ideally, these standards are ones that every rational person
wants every other to follow, even if everyone elses following them would mean that he
or she had to do the same.
b. Professional Ethics
Professional Ethics refer to those special morally permissible standards of conduct that,
ideally, every member of a profession wants every other member to follow, even if that
would mean having to do the same.
Ethics applies to members of a group simply because they are members of that group. Medical ethics
applies to people in medicine (and no one else); business ethics applies to people in business (and no
one else); and engineering ethics applies to engineers.
Engineering ethics is as much a part of what engineers in particular know as factors of safety, testing
procedures, or ways to design for reliability, durability, or economy. Engineering ethics is part of thinking
like an engineer.
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Big news for the media is usually bad news. This is why, when audiences are asked to think of media
coverage of ethical issues in engineering, they come up with a familiar list of disasters: the collapse of
houses in Kenya, the state of roads, and so on-and on.
But an exclusive focus on big news/bad news events may encourage engineering students to think of
ethics as primarily about othersthose relatively few engineers who have the misfortune of being
involved in something newsworthy.
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No to moral problems is conflict. We say that we are in a conflict over an issue, meaning
that we feel pulled in two different directions by competing considerations.
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