Introduction
Part 1: Today's Human Condition: Old or New?
1. Lost in the Fog
2. The Survival Problem
3. World Hysteria
4. Nothing New
5. Is Technology Ethically Neutral?
6. Where Are We Going?
7. The Incompatibility of Values
8. Reflections on Culture and Religion in a Postindustrial Age
Part 2: Old and/ or New Ethics?
9. Technology and the Law
10. Why Heteronomous Ethics?
11. Modern Technology and Judeo-Christian Ethics
12. What Ancient Ethics Can Contribute
13. Science, Natural Law, and Ethics—a Jewish Perspective
14. Education for "Moral Intelligence"
15. On the Consecration and Secularization of Science
16. The Equivocal Role of Philosophy
17. Scientific Ethics
18. The Partnership of Ethics and Technology
19. Ecology and Ethics
20. Rational Ethics and Human Nature
21. Man and the Man-Made
22. Technoethics
23. Religious Means and Ethical Ends
Part 3: Translating Ethics into Action
24. Individual Consciousness and Responsibility
25. Science and Conscience
26. The Social Responsibility of Scientists
27. Broadening Engineering Education—the Technological Imperative
28. Ethical Models
29. The Ethical Imperative of Architecture
30. The Powerlessness of Engineers
31. Industry and the Environment
32. Technology and Institutions
33. Morality in Industry
34. The Message of the Kibbutz
35. Adapting Behavior
36. Information Decision Making, and Bureaucratization
37. Human Engineering of Decisions
38. Virtue and Practicality
39. Probabilities and Trade-offs
Part 4: Joining Morality and Power
40. Making Morality Effective
41. Dangers of the Parochial View
42. The Ethics of Nonpower
43. The Heuristics of Fear
Part 5: The Mount Carmel Declaration
44. The Mount Carmel Declaration on Technology and Moral Responsibility
Part 6: Postlude
45. Reflections on the Mount Carmel Declaration
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还没人写过短评呢
还没人写过短评呢