Before there was Google, there was the Online Ethics Center.
Roughly 25 years ago, the late philosopher of science, technology and medicine Caroline Whitbeck founded the center at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology as a searchable digital library for resources related to ethics in engineering. In 2007, the center became part of the National Academy of Engineering’s Center for Engineering Ethics and Society, which continued the online repository as a go-to for educators, students, researchers and occasionally practitioners looking for help to teach, understand or just think through ethical issues in their work.
Today, the University of Virginia and Rosalyn W. Berne, an associate professor in 鶹ƽ Department of Engineering and Society, are the keepers of Whitbeck’s vision. The moved to UVA Engineering from the National Academy of Engineering in October, with Berne as its director.
At that time, the academy opted to disestablish the Center for Engineering Ethics and Society, for which Berne was then serving as director while on leave from UVA. The decision meant the Online Ethics Center needed a home. Berne has stayed on as the online center’s director and principal investigator of the project, which is funded by National Science Foundation grants.
Berne has taught ethics in the science, technology and society program at UVA Engineering for two decades, earning a prestigious NSF CAREER Award, producing two scholarly books, a science fiction novel (she uses science fiction to teach ethics) and two nonfiction works.
She’s had a fulfilling and distinguished career, although she came to it through tragedy.
In 1989, two weeks away from the birth of their first child, Berne and her husband learned their daughter would not survive more than a few hours or days. The baby had anencephaly, a condition in which the brain does not fully develop. The couple wanted to donate her organs, but were unable to because the infant had detectable brainwaves. They had to make the decision to take their daughter off life support.
“Afterward, I wanted to understand why what we’d considered an act of goodness was also seen as morally wrong,” Berne said. “So, I went back to school for a Ph.D. in religious studies with a focus on bioethics.”