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Engineering Ethics

Engineering Ethics

Engineering Ethics

Balancing Cost, Schedule, and Risk - Lessons Learned from the Space Shuttle
Rosa Lynn B. Pinkus, University of Pittsburgh
Larry J. Shuman, University of Pittsburgh
Norman P. Hummon, University of Pittsburgh
Harvey Wolfe, University of Pittsburgh
May 1997
Paperback
9780521437509
$88.99
USD
Paperback

    How do engineers respond to ethical dilemmas that occur in practice? How do they view their individual and collective responsibilities? How do they make decisions before all the facts are in? Using the space shuttle program as its framework, this book examines the role of ethical decision making in the practice of engineering. In particular, the authors consider the design and development of the main engines of the space shuttle as a paradigm for how individual engineers perceive, articulate, and resolve ethical dilemmas in a large, complex organization. A series of in-depth case studies show engineers at work on various stages of the project as they balance budgets, deadlines, and risks. By documenting the historical development of a single system, the volume provides a unique opportunity to explore the complex interactions between political, organizational, and technical pressures and engineering and management decisions. The resulting book will appeal to everyone with an interest in engineering and the history of technology.

    • Unique in its focus on a single system - space shuttle program - to examine engineering ethics
    • Uses case studies to show how engineers perceive and resolve ethical issues
    • Appeals to the growing interest in engineering ethics in engineering courses and industry

    Reviews & endorsements

    "...opens a vista on a dilemma that confronts all engineers and decision makers in the modern politically correct world." Choice

    "I found the chapter describing the engineering ethics framework enlightening and invaluable....As a reference book on ethics and the engineering decision making process, it is a valuable edition to your library." Mechanical Engineering News

    "Engineering Ethics provides what may be the most comprehensive examination of contemporary science-technology-society issues available to science educators who view STS through a systemic, systems-wide lens...inherently interesting, comprehensible, and insightful...a skillfully crafted reflective analysis of a complex world where scientific reasoning meshes with social and political structures, and where science and technology are presented as creative endeavors and are revealed in every sense to be human enterprises." Science Education

    "As a detailed study of ethical issues arising in the space shuttle program, Engineering Ethics is quite successful. The methodology it offers is quite helpful in organizing and analyzing those ethical issues...a good read and a welcome contribution to the growing literature of engineering ethics." Technology and Culture

    See more reviews

    Product details

    May 1997
    Paperback
    9780521437509
    400 pages
    229 × 154 × 23 mm
    0.727kg
    40 b/w illus. 5 tables
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Part I. Theoretical and Practical Background:
    • 1. Low-bid ethics: Decision-making about cost, safety and deadlines
    • 2. Engineering ethics framework
    • 3. Engineering ethics: The common ground between individual whim and legality
    • 4. Satisficing, organizational theory and other theoretical contributions to engineering ethics
    • 5. The decision to build the space shuttle: Pay me now or pay me later
    • 6. The space shuttle main engine: An overview
    • 7. All-up testing versus component testing: Normative practice or flawed judgment?
    • Part II. The Cases:
    • 8. A. O. Tischler: An 'ethical' engineer (alternatives to whistle-blowing)
    • 9. Cost versus schedule versus risk: The band-aid fix: $3.5 million overrun in test stand construction
    • 10. Back to the drawing board or normal errors: Senate investigations of the SSME development problems
    • 11. A judgment call or negligence: Maiden voyage of the Challenger delayed six months
    • 12. Against the odds: Ethical decisions and organizational goals
    • 13. Engineering ethics and risk assessment
    • Part III. Postscript:
    • 14. The Challenger accident: Engineering design and performance decisions.
      Authors
    • Rosa Lynn B. Pinkus , University of Pittsburgh
    • Larry J. Shuman , University of Pittsburgh
    • Norman P. Hummon , University of Pittsburgh
    • Harvey Wolfe , University of Pittsburgh