The field of engineering ethics emerged in the early 1990s in Taiwan, following the example of the United States, which had developed this field over the previous three decades. The Institute of Engineering Education Taiwan (IEET) recommends that students of engineering schools study engineering ethics so as to acquire an “understanding of professional ethics and social responsibility.” For the most part, the scenarios used for teaching are simplistically real or hypothetical ones framed by the codes of ethics, or case studies borrowed directly from the United States. In this paper I argue that adding components of STS studies, especially historical-sociological analyses of real cases to engineering ethics, is beneficial and more consonant with IEET requirements, and I draw on the concepts of STS studies to analyze a local case study as an illustration of this.
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1 December 2013
Research Article|
December 01 2013
Engineering Ethics, Sts, and the China Airlines Ci-611 AccidentEngineering Ethics, STS, and the China Airlines CI-611 AccidentD.-Y. Tai
Dong-Yuan Tai
Dong-Yuan Tai
Dong-Yuan Tai holds a PhD in philosophy from Tunghai University and is currently an adjunct assistant professor in the Center for General Education at National Tsing Hua University. His interests include the sociology of scientific knowledge and the history and philosophy of science. His research is primarily concerned with rationality in science and with sixteenth- and seventeenth-century astronomy and natural philosophy.
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East Asian Science, Technology and Society (2013) 7 (4): 579–599.
Article history
Received:
May 24 2012
Accepted:
May 03 2013
Citation
Dong-Yuan Tai; Engineering Ethics, Sts, and the China Airlines Ci-611 Accident
Engineering Ethics, STS, and the China Airlines CI-611 Accident
D.-Y. Tai
. East Asian Science, Technology and Society 1 December 2013; 7 (4): 579–599. doi: https://doi.org/10.1215/18752160-2392189
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