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  Home > JCE Print > Journal of Chemical Education > Issues > 1997  > July  >
Chemical Education Today
Letters
Ethics for Scientists
Kovac replies:
Jeffrey Kovac
Department of Chemistry, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, TN 37996-1600

Cover
July 1997
Vol. 74 No. 7
p. 744

Full Text

The author replies to Sommerer.

The term "scientific ethics" is commonly used to refer to the ethics of the practice of science, just as medical ethics refers to ethics of the practice of medicine and legal ethics refers to the ethics of the practice of law. Neither in common usage nor in my article is there any implication that scholarly work in the ethics of other professions is any less "scientific", whatever is meant by that term. My own thinking has been strongly influenced by the excellent scholarship of colleagues writing on the ethics of fields outside of science, as I have acknowledged in my article. I agree that there might be confusion because the adjective "scientific" is sometimes used to suggest that the scholarship is somehow more rigorous. John Dewey, for example, favored science education for children in hopes that they would develop "scientific habits of the mind", which he viewed as desirable thinking habits.

Perhaps a new term is needed to avoid the confusion, though I hope that our colleagues outside of science do not assume that the adjective scientific is being used to subtly denigrate their work. "Science ethics" is nicely parallel to business ethics and engineering ethics, so it would serve. The more cumbersome "ethics for scientists" or "ethics of scientific practice" are alternate possibilities, but none of the alternatives comes off the tongue as nicely as scientific ethics. Names are powerful. If the term scientific ethics is troubling to ethicists outside of science, it should be replaced. If not, I prefer to retain the more felicitous phrase.

More Information
*  Citation
Kovac, Jeffrey. J. Chem. Educ. 1997 74 744.
*  Keywords
Ethics
*  History
Created:
Last Updated:
July 28, 1999
June 23, 2005
Link to Letter added (May 2004).
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