Abstract:
Polanyi insisted that scientific knowledge was intensely personal in
nature, though held with universal intent. His insights regarding the personal values
of beauty and morality in science are first enunciated. These are then explored for
their relevance to engineering. It is shown that the practice of engineering is also
governed by aesthetics and ethics. For example, Polanyi’s three spheres of morality
in science—that of the individual scientist, the scientific community and the wider
society—has parallel entities in engineering. The existence of shared values in
engineering is also demonstrated, in aesthetics through an example that shows
convergence of practitioner opinion to solutions that represent accepted models of
aesthetics; and in ethics through the recognition that many professional engineering
institutions hold that the safety of the public supersedes the interests of the client.
Such professional consensus can be seen as justification for studying engineering
aesthetics and ethics as inter-subjective disciplines.
Citation:
Dias, P. (2011). Aesthetics and Ethics in Engineering: Insights from Polanyi. Science and Engineering Ethics, 17(2), 233–243. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11948-009-9188-4