In the twenty-first century, the urgent problems the world is facing (the UN Sustainable Development Goals) are increasingly related to vast and intricate ‘systems of systems’, which comprise both socio-technical and eco-systems. In order for engineers to adequately and responsibly respond to these problems, they cannot focus on only one technical or any other aspect in isolation, but must adopt a wider and multidisciplinary perspective of these systems, including an ethical and social perspective. Engineering curricula should therefore focus on what we call ‘comprehensive engineering’. Comprehensive engineering implies ethical coherence, consilience of scientific disciplines, and cooperation between parties.
CITATION STYLE
van den Hoven, J. (2019). Ethics and the UN Sustainable Development Goals: The Case for Comprehensive Engineering. Science and Engineering Ethics, 25(6), 1789–1797. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11948-016-9862-2
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.