About Engineering Based On Love
| Authors | Catalano, George; Baillie, Caroline |
|---|---|
| Date | 2009 |
| Conference | 2009 Annual Conference & Exposition |
| Vol / Pages | pp. 14.543.1-14.543.11 |
| URL | https://peer.asee.org/engineering-based-on-love |
Type: Conference Paper
Abstract
A recent death of a beloved member of one of our immediate families has served as a catalyst for our reflection on not only the nature of our work but also upon our approach to the issue of reforms in engineering and engineering education which are desperately needed. In engineering we often speak of development and now of sustainability. Far too often it seems that the model used in engineering in general and in engineering education specifically is based upon profit making. The ultimate goal is economic growth with little if any interest in peace, social or environmental justice or wealth distribution. Such a model ignores inequalities, has contempt for the arts and literature, promotes group think, needs docile students and de-emphasizes critical thinking. We would like to offer a different paradigm, one which has as its priority the development of not only the human species but also the rest of the natural world. We would like to offer a new paradigm for engineering based upon a new ethic, linked to our capacity to love. Using such a paradigm, each and every being matters, groups are disaggregated into individuals and equal respect exists for each individual. Such an ethic calls upon us to transcend our own particular situations and imagine a global society which is based upon equality, to honor individual dissent and to develop our own individual narrative of moral imagination, that is, to develop the ability to be in another’s shoes, to cultivate our inner eye of seeing and knowing and to overcome the blindness that we have all become far too accustomed.
