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  1. “Things that went well — No serious injuries or deaths”: Ethical reasoning in a normal engineering design process.Peter Lloyd & Jerry Busby - 2003 - Science and Engineering Ethics 9 (4):503-516.
    We argue that considering only a few ‘big’ ethical decisions in any engineering design process — both in education and practice — only reinforces the mistaken idea of engineering design as a series of independent sub-problems. Using data collected in engineering design organisations over a seven year period, we show how an ethical component to engineering decisions is much more pervasive. We distinguish three types of ethical justification for engineering decisions: (1) consequential, (2) deontological or non-consequential, and (3) virtue-based. We (...)
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  • L'urne et le pot de chambre.John Hyman - 2006 - Revue de Synthèse 127 (1):97-114.
    En 1931, Ludwig Wittgenstein a identifié l'architecte et le critique culturel Adolf Loos comme une des dix personnes qui ont exercé la plus grande influence sur son développement intellectuel. Dans cet article est examinée l'influence de Loos sur Wittgenstein, en particulier son importance dans le projet de Wittgenstein pour la maison de sa soeur, ainsi que celle exercée sur les idées concernant la langue et léthique exprimées dans le Tractacus.
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