Good point, there was also an ethics module in my engineering studies, but it didn’t really encourage you to think about where you’re employed, just what to do what you’re there. Which is useless
Comment on All while the skeletal, crumbling, dusty bones of an econ major pulls business backwards into hell.
Truscape@lemmy.blahaj.zone 1 day agoEthics is largely mandatory for engineering majors (source: am finishing my bachelor’s in electrical engineering), but the first job or project you take will ask you to throw that out the window.
There are two areas of safety considered: Operator/client safety, and regulatory compliance. All other safeguards are optional and ignoring them is encouraged.
PotatoesFall@discuss.tchncs.de 23 hours ago
Eq0@literature.cafe 1 day ago
I had very little ethics being taught in my academic career. Most of what i know is high school level philosophy (from a country that still used to care about that stuff but aiming to change it soon). I would have loved more humanity courses. On the other hand, if you had given me the choice between a course in my speciality and a humanity course, I would have chose the specialty one every time
fckreddit@lemmy.ml 1 day ago
As a civil engineer with only a tiny bit of experience cos I switched to software. That holds true. Environmental and other ethical concerns are not even an afterthought in vast majority of engineering projects.
grue@lemmy.world 23 hours ago
Holy shit, I’m not the only one?!
exasperation@lemmy.dbzer0.com 22 hours ago
I think this is true of most civil engineering majors I know. After getting their degrees, very few actually ended up working in civil engineering because the money was better in software or other tech.