CompSci 307 Fall 2021 |
Software Design and Implementation |
There are few things wholly evil or wholly good. Almost everything is an inseparable compound of the two, so that our best judgment of the preponderance between them is continually demanded. — Abraham Lincoln
Submit a Markdown formatted plain text file, named week03_ethics.md
, to the individual portfolio_NETID
repository provided for you in the course's Gitlab group.
Ethical dilemmas are situations in which one must make a moral decision about what to do (e.g., right vs. right/wrong, good vs. good/bad, a moral judgment about a person/event/concept), but the right choice can be unclear or complicated because of the costs involved. Moreover, personal responses to ethical dilemmas may well be internalized (e.g., personal ethics code, moral training at home, religious beliefs, etc.), making it hard to articulate why you believe something is correct or not. Certainly not something you might expect to encounter in the right or wrong answers given by computer algorithms in your CompSci classes!
However, as technology, computers, algorithms, and software are embedded into more aspects of life, there seem to be more questions seem than answers. What is your view of ethics in CompSci?
After answering the questions above, read this article and respond to it from the perspective of what you personally can do to learn more about ethics in CompSci.
Mistakes are inevitable, especially when attempting something you have never done before. However, especially in a school setting, they should not be painful experiences but, instead, opportunities for learning and improving. In fact, many experts suggest keeping a personal Failure Journal to help you see patterns in your mistakes. With every experience comes the choice to retreat or grow and change. Indeed, in this course, you will be judged less for your mistakes than how you respond to and improve from them.
Consider the following quotes about failure:
Choose one as a starting point to reflect on an unsuccessful academic experience and how you ultimately benefited from it (whether or not it seemed painful at the time).