Dissertations

Volume 1: Lotte Asveld, Respect for autonomy and technological Risks, 2008

Volume 2: Mechteld-Hanna Derksen, Engineering Flesh, Towards Professional Responsibility for 'Lived Bodies' in Tissue Engineering, 2008

Volume 3: Govert Valkenburg, Politics by All Means. An Enquiry into Technological Liberalism, 2009

Volume 4: Noëmi Manders-Huits, Designing for Moral Identity in Information Technology, 2010

Volume 5: Behnam Taebi, Nuclear Power and Justice between Generations. A Moral Analysis of Fuel Cycles, 2010

Volume 6: Daan Schuurbiers, Social Responsibility in Research Practice. Engaging Applied Scientists with the Socio-Ethical Context of their Work, 2010

Volume 7: Neelke Doorn, Moral Responsibility in R&D Networks, A Procedural Approach to Distributing Responsibilities, 2011

 

Volume 1: Marcel Scheele, ‘The Proper Use of Artefacts: A philosophical theory of the social constitution of artifact functions’, 2005

Volume 2: Anke van Gorp, Ethical issues in engineering design, Safety an sustainability, 2005

Volume 3: Vincent Wiegel, SophoLab, Experimental Computational Philosophy

Volume 4: Jeroen de Ridder, Technical Artifacts, Design and Explanation, 2006

Volume 5: Melissa van Amerongen, The Interpretation of artifacts; A critique of Dennett’s design stance, 2008

Volume 6: Krist Vaesen, A Philosophical Essay on Artifacts and Norms, 2008

Volume 7: Giacomo Romano, Thoughtful Things. An investigation in the descriptive epistemology of artifacts, 2009

Volume 8: Dingmar van Eck, Functional Decomposition: on Rationality and Incommensurability in Engineering, 2011

 

© 2012 TU Delft

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