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         Engineer Ethics:     more books (89)
  1. ETHICS FOR ENGINEERS: Canons of Ethics, Creed, and Rules of Professional Conduct by National Society Of Professional Engineers, 1957
  2. Website Engineer Ethics 3e by PRITCHARD, RABINS, et all 2004-07-02
  3. Responsible engineering: Virginia Tech establishes global ethics curriculum.(Front Line): An article from: Industrial Engineer by Gale Reference Team, 2008-11-01
  4. Controlling Technology: Ethics and the Responsible Engineer by Stephen H Unger, 1981
  5. THE ETHICAL ENGINEER by HARRY HARRISON, 2010-01-01
  6. Fundamentals of Ethics for Scientists and Engineers 2000 publication. by Robrt LBary, 2000
  7. Engineering law, design liability & professional ethics: An introduction for engineers (Engineering reference manual series) by Professional Publications, 1983
  8. Ethics, Technology, and Engineering: An Introduction by Ibo van de Poel, Lamb?r Royakkers, 2011-04-19
  9. Ethics, Technology, and Engineering: An Introduction by Ibo van de Poel, Lamb?r Royakkers, 2011-04-19
  10. Professional ethics and the engineer: A bibliography by Noel J Hughes, 1976
  11. Engineering economics and ethics for professional engineers' license by John Dennis Constance, 1957
  12. Engineering Ethics: Applied ethics, Engineer, Society, Professional Engineer, Licensure, Whistleblower, Product liability, Business ethics, Chartered engineer
  13. Preliminary book on problems in professional ethics for engineers by N. A Christensen, 1961
  14. Professional integrity of the engineer as it applies to marketing (Paper / American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Winter Meeting) by Henry R Mathias, 1961

21. Civil Engineering Consultants - Registered In Florida & Puerto Rico
Employer should indemnify the engineer for use of the information for any purposeother former Section 11(c) of the NSPE Code of ethics prohibiting competitive
http://www.consultingengineering.net/ethics.htm
Civil Engineering Consultants, Ltd. Co. Navigation Home
Engineer's Creed

Engineer's Code of Ethics

Our Services
...
Contact Us

- NSPE's Code of Ethics Preamble

Engineering is an important and learned profession. As members of this profession, engineers are expected to exhibit the highest standards of honesty and integrity. Engineering has a direct and vital impact on the quality of life for all people. Accordingly, the services provided by engineers require honesty, impartiality, fairness and equity, and must be dedicated to the protection of the public health, safety, and welfare. Engineers must perform under a standard of professional behavior that requires adherence to the highest principles of ethical conduct.
I. Fundamental Canons
Engineers, in the fulfillment of their professional duties, shall:
1. Hold paramount the safety, health and welfare of the public.
2. Perform services only in areas of their competence.

22. Consulting-Specifying Engineer - Web Resources For Engineering
The 25question exam on this web site (www.nspe.org/ethics/eh1-test.asp)tests an engineer's knowledge of NSPE's code of ethics.
http://www.csemag.com/esec/Article_178656.htm

23. EGR 402 Engineering Ethics: To The Engineer
like, Why do we have to learn philosophy, and why do we have to learn ethics? representa credential but I would rather it equip me to be a better engineer.
http://www.csupomona.edu/~rosenkrantz/egr402/reader1.htm
To the Engineer (Back to Main Menu)

24. EGR 402 Engineering Ethics: The Role Of An Engineer
The Role of an engineer. Bureaucratic Servant The engineer does what his employertells him to and asks no questions or offers no interventions.
http://www.csupomona.edu/~rosenkrantz/egr402/reader12.htm
The Role of an Engineer (Back to Main Menu) Aristotle's philosophy is one part culture and one part abstract logic. In other words, a logic exists independent of culture, but the culture must embrace that logic in its own way. There are some moral criteria which are non-negotiable, such as the virtues. Courage, Friendship, and generosity are virtues shaped largely out of abstract logic, but they are constrained by the individual's capacities in their fulfillment. This creates a fairly rigid placeholder for virtues, the fulfillment of which can vary. For instance, a frail man and a very strong man can each be courageous, however this does not mean that they should act the same in every situation. If the frail man faces a very strong man in battle, and tries to fight the strong man knowing he cannot defeat the strong man, he has acted foolishly, not courageously. So there is a proper action relative to the individual's qualities for a given set of circumstances. Consider the Following professional roles, adapted from the text:

25. Philosophy, Ethics & Values For The New Engineer
New Book Coming Soon! PHILOSOPHY, ethics AND VALUES FOR THE NEW engineer. WorkingTitle Philosophy, ethics, and Values for the New engineer.
http://www.4sustainability.com/sdeng/pevbk.htm
New Book Coming Soon! PHILOSOPHY, ETHICS AND VALUES
FOR THE NEW ENGINEER
    New Book in Computational Mechanics
    Environmental Engineering Series Working Title Philosophy, Ethics, and Values
    for the New Engineer Editors Cynthia A. Mitchell and Fiona S. Crofton
    The old culture of engineering as dominating nature is dying. Around the world, the calls for cultural change within engineering education are more and more frequent. Our world is changing rapidly, and the pace of change will continue to increase. And yet, the means by which we interact with the world, provided by engineers, must change if we are to avoid the slippery slope of unsustainability. This book will make a significant contribution to these calls for change. It will bring together a wide range of arguments from inside and outside engineering, underpinning the need for a new core philosophy in the practice of engineering. These arguments will point out the need to actualise that philosophy, along with the inherent difficulties in so doing, and will provide some pointers for the way forward. The starting point for this book is that all engineers have a pivotal role to play in moving towards sustainability, but that our current practices and beliefs do not yet help us in achieving this goal. Contributions to the book will:

26. Professional Ethics In Engineering - Who Is The Microsoft System Engineer!!!?
Home Forums Trends and Strategies Keeping Ahead of the Curve ProfessionalEthics in engineering Who is the Microsoft System engineer!!!?
http://www.eng-tips.com/gviewthread.cfm/lev2/89/lev3/92/pid/765/qid/19327
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27. Workshop Of Materials And System Safety Study Group
the role of the engineering and technology over public presentation of the ethicsof engineering, the ethics of a company, an engineer's ethics, an engineer's
http://www.nims.go.jp/materials_risk/english/event/event6.htm
Information for Event Workshop of Materials and System Safety Study Group `The ethics in engineering, and the role of engineers` Sponsor: Materials and System Safety Forum, The Society of Non-Traditional Technology Co-sponsor: Support: The Iron and Steel Institute of Japan, Safety Factor and Allowable Stress Setting Research Committee (prearranged)
The Japan Institute of Metals, The 0th subcommittee (prearranged)
High Pressure Institute of Japan, Permission stress database committee Objectives: The concern about the safety of relation to a citizen with earth environment or health is high. Recently, people concern is pulled and the accident in which the technology which has big influence also socially participates has occurred mostly. As for the citizen, the situation that it cannot share technology information with a specialist with deepening of the specialty nature of technology while health and the concern which receives safely are high is also born. For this reason, the doubt over technology may be held by the occurrence of the accident and the accident as technical fault may be sensationally treated as a social incident. On the other hand, in present-day Japanese society, many engineers are the members of an organization and are in trouble on the facilities of an organization and an individual, and the balance of a risk.
Future society's contribution of technology will increase increasingly. Moreover, of course, in our country, a state does not pay a risk, but the West is going in the direction left to individual selection. For this reason, social mission and role of the engineer who is in the center of technology and knows information well are large. This workshop discusses the role of the engineering and technology over public presentation of the ethics of engineering, the ethics of a company, an engineer's ethics, an engineer's social responsibility, and information, transparentizing and technical selection, and a risk etc. aiming at safe social construction.

28. ENGINEER WHO QUIT OVER ETHICS GETS UNEMPLOYMENT
engineer WHO QUIT OVER ethics GETS UNEMPLOYMENT. June 29, 1998, Page7. Idaho's Industrial Commission restored unemployment benefits
http://www.responsiblecharge.com/engineer_who_quit.htm
ENGINEER WHO QUIT OVER ETHICS GETS UNEMPLOYMENT. June 29, 1998, Page 7 Idaho's Industrial Commission restored unemployment benefits to Ed Turner, the former Idaho Falls City Engineer-. "He could have been in the position of violating State law, "the Commission wrote.
"There was nothing to do but leave."

29. P.Eng | Your Licence To Engineer
and territorial engineering licensing body has adopted a brief but important documentcalled a Code of ethics. Spelling out the engineer's obligation to
http://www.peng.ca/english/profession/ethics.html
Ethics
Every provincial and territorial engineering licensing body has adopted a brief but important document called a Code of Ethics.
Spelling out the engineer's obligation to society and to their fellow engineers, the Code helps to guide engineers throughout their careers by explaining what behaviour is expected of them, and what behaviour could lead to a complaint, an investigation or even some form of punishment.
To order or download a copy of your province's or territory's engineering Code of Ethics online, contact your provincial or territorial licensing body

30. Controlling Technology: Ethics And The Responsible Engineer : Ward And Massey Li
Unger, Stephen H. Title Controlling Technology ethics and the ResponsibleEngineer. Publisher New York CBS College Publishing, 1982.
http://www.mises.org/wardlibrary_detail.asp?control=13693

31. 50-4: CODE OF ETHICS FOR A PROFESSIONAL ENGINEER
504. CODE OF ethics FOR A PROFESSIONAL engineer. by RP SINGH Department of Biologicaland Agricultural engineering, University of California, Davis, CA 95616
http://www.confex.com/ift/98annual/accepted/50-4.htm
CODE OF ETHICS FOR A PROFESSIONAL ENGINEER by R. P. SINGH
Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering, University of California, Davis, CA 95616 The engineering education in the United States is largely influenced by the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology (ABET). ABET defines engineering as "the profession in which a knowledge of the mathematical and natural sciences gained by study, experience, and practice is applied with judgment to develop ways to utilize, economically, the materials and forces of nature for the benefit of mankind." The words "with judgment" raise the most ethics-oriented questions for an engineer. In a problem-solving scenario, an engineer must make choices among various possible solutions, the role of ethics in making those choices becomes an important factor. There are several examples from the recent past where an engineer's judgment has raised ethical questions in the minds of public, such as the space shuttle Challenger accident. The National Society of Professional Engineers (NSPE), the umbrella organization of state professional engineering societies, provides a general code of ethics for engineers. According to NSPE, "Engineers must perform under a standard of professional behavior that requires adherence to the highest principles of ethical conduct." The Society provides a list of six fundamental cannons for engineers to fulfill in their profession duties. These cannons are further delineated with rules of practice. The interpretations of the code rules, as promulgated by NSPE, are best understood by examining cases that have been brought to the NSPE Board of Ethical Review (BER). A discussion of some selected cases reviewed by the Board provides an insight on how certain ethical dilemmas were resolved. These examples deal with various issues such as whistleblowing by an engineer in a food processing plant, confidentiality of an engineering report, and joint authorship of a paper.

32. The Law, Ethics And The Engineer
31Oct-02 Briefing to the Texas Board of Professional Engineers
http://www.if.uidaho.edu/~alesrs/MasterEngineering/SE_History.htm
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33. MDS 320: Ethics In Engineering
41.03codeof.htm). Required Reading Unger, S. Controlling TechnologyEthics and the Responsible engineer, 2nd Ed., Wiley, 1994.
http://www4.ncsu.edu/~jherkert/mds320.html
MDS 320: Ethics in Engineering
Division of Multidisciplinary Studies
North Carolina State University
General Information Outline and Assignments ... Related Links MDS 320 ETHICS IN ENGINEERING Spring 2002 Instructor Dr. Joseph R. Herkert
Division of Multidisciplinary Studies

Campus Mail: Box 7107
E-mail: joe_herkert@ncsu.edu
Office: 2 Carter-Williams Bldg. (2806 Hillsborough St.)
Hours: 2:30-4:00 PM Tuesdays and Thursdays, or by appointment
Phone: 515-7993 Course Description Engineering in American culture and the emerging ethical issues confronting the profession: corporate responsibility, personal rights, whistle blowing, conflicts of interest, professional autonomy, risk assessment, sustainable development, and the place and purpose of engineering codes of ethics. Three hours credit. (Prerequisite: Junior Standing) Course Requirements
  • Preparation, class attendance and regular participation in class discussions (36% of course grade). One third of the grade for this portion of the course will be based on attendance (see below), one third on unannounced pop-quizzes on the assigned readings ( no make-ups for unexcused absences ), and one third on class participation.
  • 34. Pfeiffer :: Controlling Technology: Ethics And The Responsible Engineer, 2nd Edi
    Pfeiffer, Controlling Technology ethics and the Responsible engineer,2nd Edition by Stephen H. Unger. General Industrial engineering,
    http://www.pfeiffer.com/cda/product/0,,0471591815|print|2784,00.html
    General Industrial Engineering Controlling Technology: Ethics and the Responsible Engineer, 2nd Edition
    Stephen H. Unger
    ISBN: 0-471-59181-5
    Paperback
    368 Pages
    January 1994
    US $99.00 Add to Cart
    If you are an instructor, you may request an evaluation copy for this title.
    Description

    Table of Contents

    Author Information
    by

    35. Hold Paramount: The Engineer's Responsibility To Society
    Can We Afford to be Ethical? engineering Codes of ethics. Can a Person Stop Beingan engineer? Codes of ethics and the Environment. Ethically Right for Me?
    http://newtexts.com/newtexts/book.cfm?book_id=909

    36. Engineer To Address Challenger Disaster, Ethics
    engineer to address Challenger disaster, ethics. Roger Boisjoly. FormerMortonThiokol engineer Roger Boisjoly, who came to national
    http://www.rit.edu/~930www/Proj/NewsEvents/1998/May01/ethics.html
    Engineer to address Challenger disaster, ethics
    Roger Boisjoly Former Morton-Thiokol engineer Roger Boisjoly, who came to national prominencewhen he opposed senior Thiokol managers' decision to launch the Challenger space shuttle, will speak at RIT May 6 and 7. Boisjoly's presentation, "The Responsibilities and Professional Obligations of Engineers," will run from noon to 1 p.m. on May 6. His second talk, "Challenger: As a Model to Change Organizational Behavior," will take place 3 to 4 p.m. on May 7. Both presentations will be in the auditorium of the Chester F. Carlson Center for Imaging Science. The talks are free and open to the public. A 27-year veteran of the aerospace industry, Boisjoly worked for Morton-Thiokol as a technical troubleshooter on the space shuttle solid rocket boosters. Since 1987, he has pursued a career as a consulting forensic engineer and lecturer on organizational behavior and ethics. His visit to RIT is sponsored by a Provost's Productivity Grant and by the Ezra A. Hale Chair in Applied Ethics. Index for This Issue RIT's Main Page

    37. LECTURE 47: ETHICS AND THE DSP ENGINEER
    WHAT ARE ethics? VALUES ideals or concepts that give meaning to the individual'slife; values are most commonly derived from societal norms;;
    http://www.isip.msstate.edu/publications/courses/ece_4773/lectures/current/lectu
    WHAT ARE ETHICS?
    • VALUES : ideals or concepts that give meaning to the individual's life; values are most commonly derived from societal norms;
    • MORALS : the fundamental standards of right and wrong that an individual learns and internalizes usually in the early stages of childhood; it is generally based upon religious beliefs, although societal influence plays an important role; moral behavior is often manifested as behavior in accordance with a group's norms;
    • LAWS : defined as rules of social conduct devised by people to protect society; based upon the concerns for fairness and justice; the fundamental goal of society's laws is the preservation of the species; and laws are enforceable through police action;
    • ETHICS : declarations of what is right or wrong; and what ought to be; these are systems of valued behaviors and beliefs and serve the purpose of governing conduct to ensure the protection of an individual's rights; ethics exist on several levels from the individual to the society at large; there are no system to enforce ethical statements or stands;
    • A CODE OF ETHICS : written list of a profession's values and standards of conduct; it provides a framework of decision-making for the profession and should be oriented toward the day-to-day decisions made by members of the profession;

    38. LECTURE 47: ETHICS AND THE DSP ENGINEER

    http://www.isip.msstate.edu/publications/courses/ece_4773/lectures/current/lectu

    39. FIDIC Federation About Ethics
    About FIDIC Code of ethics, industry. The consulting engineer shallAccept the responsibility of the consulting industry to society.
    http://www2.fidic.org/about/ethics.asp
    FIDIC Home Site search Site map Contact FIDIC ... Help About FIDIC - Code of Ethics Welcome Intro Secretariat Committees ... Members The International Federation of Consulting Engineers recognises that the work of the consulting engineering industry is critical to the achievement of sustainable development of society and the environment. To be fully effective not only must engineers constantly improve their knowledge and skills, but also society must respect the integrity and trust the judgement of members of the profession and remunerate them fairly. All member associations of FIDIC subscribe to and believe that the following principles are fundamental to the behaviour of their members if society is to have that necessary confidence in its advisors. Responsibility to society and the consulting industry The consulting engineer shall:
    • Accept the responsibility of the consulting industry to society. Seek solutions that are compatible with the principles of sustainable development. At all times uphold the dignity, standing and reputation of the consulting industry.
    Competence The consulting engineer shall:
    • Maintain knowledge and skills at levels consistent with development in technology, legislation and management, and apply due skill, care and diligence in the services rendered to the client.

    40. Welcome To The Institute
    upon the evidence, that an engineer has been discharged solely or in substantialpart because of his bona fide efforts to conform to recognized ethics of his
    http://www.ieee.org/INST/feb96/ethics.html
    TOC April 2003 IEEE Links IEEE Home IEEE Spectrum Online IEEE Spectrum Careers IEEE Job Site IEEEXplore OnlineStore AboutIEEE IEEE Media Advertising Join IEEE Web Account IEEE Conferences IEEE USA

    Career Guidance
    Education Ethics Financial Advantage ... Sign Up for The Institute Email Alert
    April 2003 - Feature Story Less than Ideal Jobs for Graduates April 2003 - Feature Story Closing In On The Next President-Elect As the race for the 2004 IEEE President-Elect gets going, voters should become better acquainted with the candidates nominated by the IEEE Board of Directors. April 2003 Mid-Year Joiners Pay Half If you've been trying to convince your colleagues to join the IEEE but have had no luck, tell them that if they join now, it's late enough in the year so they'll be paying the half-year rate. April 2003 Dues Discount Expanded for Recent Graduates Reduced dues for recent graduates have been expanded to include all graduating Student Members, not just those receiving their first professional degree like a bachelor's or its equivalent.

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