Publications

Regulation or responsibility?

Author(s)
Mark Coeckelbergh
Abstract

A prima facie analysis suggests that there are essentially two, mutually exclusive, ways in which risk arising from engineering design can be managed: by imposing external constraints on engineers or by engendering their feelings of responsibility and respect their autonomy. The author discusses the advantages and disadvantages of both approaches. However, he then shows that this opposition is a false one and that there is no simple relation between regulation and autonomy. Furthermore, the author argues that the most pressing need is not more or less regulation but the further development of moral imagination. The enhancement of moral imagination can help engineers to discern the moral relevance of design problems, to create new design options, and to envisage the possible outcomes of their designs. The author suggests a dual program of developing regulatory frameworks that support engineers' autonomy and responsibility simultaneously with efforts to promote their moral imagination. He describes how some existing institutional changes have started off in this direction and proposes empirical research to take this further.

Organisation(s)
Department of Philosophy
External organisation(s)
Maastricht University Medical Center
Journal
Science, Technology & Human Values
Volume
31
Pages
237-260
No. of pages
24
ISSN
0162-2439
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/0162243905285839
Publication date
05-2006
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
603113 Philosophy
Keywords
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Portal url
https://ucris.univie.ac.at/portal/en/publications/regulation-or-responsibility(4e3d0f9d-31b1-43b5-a006-f69718dbaf9a).html