Publication:
The ‘artifex’: synergies between engineering and the humanities

dc.contributor.author Strongman, Luke
dc.date.accessioned 2025-11-04T03:48:24Z
dc.date.available 2025-11-04T03:48:24Z
dc.date.issued 2010-11-12
dc.description The 2nd International Conference on the Roles of Humanities and Social Science in Engineering (ICoHSE 2010) organized by Universiti Malaysia Perlis (UniMAP), 12th - 14th November 2010 at Bayview Beach Resort, Penang, Malaysia.
dc.description.abstract Recent critical focus on the anthropogenic arguments regarding the threats to the sustainability of biosphere highlight the role of engineering in maintaining the structural integrity of the human environment. However, the discipline of engineering is not without larger contextual and methodological problems that tend to undermine the perception of its benefit to society. These include tendencies towards utilitarianism, the irreconcilability of means vs. ends rationale, and the potential for difference-blind solutions to technical problems which ignore the possible harmful effects on the environment which extend beyond in-built cost-benefit analyses. This paper intends to reconcile scientific and humanistic views through a philosophical inquiry and argues that engineering is informed by a context that requires a counter-balancing perspective which accommodates holism, environmental compatibility, lateral and longer-term thinking as well as awareness of humanity, culture and society. Inclusion of humanities subjects within the engineering curriculum positively underscores human factors in technological problems and solutions and equips engineers with a cultural vocabulary and understanding. The argument will be made that a relationship between the humanities and engineering that resembles the Renaissance concept of the ‘artifex’ (or the attempt to harmonise the human and the technological) is both necessary and desirable for the enhancement, understanding and development of both disciplines. Furthermore, this paper demonstrates ways in which basic philosophical principles can contribute to critical thinking within the engineering discipline. This paper uses three humanities texts, Max Frisch’s Homo Faber (1959), Don de Lillo’s The Body Artist (2001), and the film Contact (1997) based on Carl Sagan’s book (1985) to problematise issues of technology and humanism and to explore the relationship of engineering to the humanities.
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14170/14938
dc.language.iso en
dc.publisher Universiti Malaysia Perlis (UniMAP)
dc.relation.conference Proceedings of the International Conference on the Roles of the Humanities and Social Sciences in Engineering 2010 (ICoHSE 2010)
dc.relation.ispartof Proceedings of the International Conference on the Roles of the Humanities and Social Sciences in Engineering 2010 (ICoHSE 2010)
dc.subject Engineering
dc.subject Humanities
dc.subject Science and technology
dc.title The ‘artifex’: synergies between engineering and the humanities
dc.type Resource Types::text::conference output::conference proceedings::conference paper
dspace.entity.type Publication
oaire.citation.endPage 15
oaire.citation.startPage 1
oairecerif.author.affiliation The Open Polytechnic of New Zealand
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