"This is a most important time in our country to be thinking about the future of engineering research, innovation, education, and entrepreneurial endeavors. As an ethicist, I am heartened to know that ethics will be considered in that process.”
Rosalyn W. Berne is an associate professor in the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences at the University of Virginia’s Department of Engineering and Society, where she has been a faculty member since 1999. She earned bachelor and master’s degrees in communication studies and a doctorate in religious studies-bioethics, all from the University of Virginia. As a scholar, Berne explores the intersecting realms of emerging technologies, science, fiction and myth, and the links between the human and non-human worlds. Her research and writing span considerations of ethics in engineering practice, biotechnology and nanotechnology, and ethics in engineering education. Published under her name are two academic books: Nanotalk: Conversations with Scientists and Engineers about Ethics, Meaning, and Belief in the Development of Nanotechnology and Creating Life from Life: Biotechnology and Science Fiction; numerous conference papers and journal articles; Waiting in the Silence: A novel with an ethics focus; and two award-winning books in the genre of body-mind-spirit: When the Horses Whisper and Waking to Beauty. On leave from UVA from 2009-2011, she served as vice president for academic affairs for the Institute for Shipboard Education. On leave from UVA from 2018-2020, Berne served as director of the Center for Engineering Ethics and Society at the National Academy of Engineering, and as PI of the Online Ethics Center. In September 2020, the OEC was transferred from the NAE to UVA, and Berne continued as PI and director of the OEC. She is an advisor to the “Engineering One Planet” project of the Lemelson Foundation; advisor to the Kern Family Foundation KEEN project titled “Educating the Whole Engineer: Engineering Fundamentals, Character Education, and Entrepreneurial Mindset; and serves on the Ethics Committee of the American Society for Engineering Education.