The intertwining of ethics and methodology in science and engineering: a virtue-ethical approach
Consoli, L. (2008). The intertwining of ethics and methodology in science and engineering: a virtue-ethical approach. Interdisciplinary Science Reviews, 33 (3): 234-43.
Abstract: Ethics in engineering and science has become a hot topic not only on
the agendas of academic institutions and funding agencies, but also
among scientists and engineers themselves and the general public.
Analysis of misconduct cases shows that fundamental issues concerning
proper methodology as well as ethics are at stake. Traditionally,
questions of methodology and ethics have been treated more or less as
separate issues, or as being related but fundamentally different, while
practitioners tend implicitly to see ethics as the underpinning
of their methodology. I contend that methodological and ethical
normativity are linked in a very fundamental way. I argue that the
relationship between method and ethics deserves to be addressed more
explicitly and can form the basis of a new approach towards ethical
issues in science and engineering. In particular, a virtue-ethical
based approach, defining the figure of the 'good practitioner', has
many advantages. As an example, I consider the issue of the function
and utility of ethical codes of conduct. Practice shows that these
codes are seldom known to practitioners and, that when they are,
practitioners have not internalised them. In other words, they do not
match with notions of proper behaviour as experienced by scientists and
engineers themselves. I argue that as long as the ethical codes are
top-down regulations of an institution, rather than the 'living
morality' of the virtuous community of scientific practice, they will
remain of limited applicability.
Source: IngentaConnect
(Something interesting I found)Posted: Thursday, January 22, 2009
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