Is product design evil?
                        Year: 2017
                        Editor: Anja Maier, Stanko Škec, Harrison Kim, Michael Kokkolaras, Josef Oehmen, Georges Fadel, Filippo Salustri, Mike Van der Loos
                        Author: Coutts, Euan Ross; Edward, Jack; Knight, Richard; Duffy, Alex; Grierson, Hilary
                        Series: ICED
                       Institution: University of Strathclyde, United Kingdom
                        Section: Resource Sensitive Design, Design Research Applications and Case Studies
                        Page(s): 209-218
                        ISBN: 978-1-904670-89-6
                        ISSN: 2220-4342
                        
Abstract
Product design presents an ethical dilemma. Despite increasing awareness of limited resources the majority of product design endeavours contribute to unsustainable over-consumption. Is the product design industry self-fulfilling; creating products in order to create more products and manufacturing demand to follow suit? Through complacency has product design become unintentionally harmful and morally questionable, has it become the greatest “evil” of our time? This paper intends to provoke thought and reflection over the role of the designer and their responsibilities. Literature on the subject of ethics, morality and responsibility in product design is reviewed and discussed, the key agents who possess responsibility in design are also explored. It is proposed that designers, while aware of sustainability concerns, possess a diminished sense of personal responsibility for these concerns. A study was conducted to assess the level of empathy possessed by product designers in this regard, it is concluded that while on the whole product designers are empathetic they are complacent with respect to environmental concerns to the extent that it may be considered harmful and damaging.
Keywords: Ethics, Human behaviour in design, Social responsibility, Sustainability