<div>Chapter 1. Reimagining Conceptions of Technological and Societal Progress</div><div>Zachary Pirtle, David Tomblin, and Guru Madhavan</div><div><br></div><div>Section IA. Technological Progress: Reimagining How Engineering Relates to the Sciences</div><div>Chapter 2. Engineering Design Principles in Natural and Artificial Systems. Part I: Generative Entrenchment and Modularity</div><div>William C. Wimsatt</div><div><br></div><div>Chapter 3. Technological Progress in the Life Sciences</div><div>Janella Baxter</div><div><br></div><div>Section 1B: Technological Progress: Re-imagining Engineering Knowledge</div><div>Chapter 4. Philosophical Observations and Applications in Systems and Aerospace Engineering</div><div>Stephen B. Johnson</div><div><br></div><div>Chapter 5. Prehistoric Stone Tool Technology and Epistemic Complexity</div><div>Manjari Chakraborty</div><div><br></div><div>Chapter 6. Narrative and Epistemic Positioning: The Case of the Dandelion Pilot</div><div>Dominic J. Berry</div><div><br></div>Section 2A. Social Progress: Considering Engineers’ Ethical Principles<div>Chapter 7. Constructing Situated and Social Knowledge: Ethical, Sociological, and Phenomenological Factors in Technological Design</div><div>Damien Patrick Williams</div><div><br></div><div>Chapter 8. Towards an Engineering Ethics with Non-engineers: How Western Engineering Ethics May Learn from Taiwan</div><div>Bono Po-Jen Shih</div><br><div>Chapter 9. Broadening Engineering Identity: Moving beyond Problem Solving</div><div>Thomas Siller, Gerry Johnson, and Russell Korte</div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div>Section 2B. Reimagining values and culture in engineering and engineered systems</div><div>Chapter 10. Engineering, Judgement and Engineering Judgement: A Proposed Definition</div><div>Daniel McLaughlin, PE</div><div><br></div><div>Chapter 11. Technology, Uncertainty, and the Good Life: A Stoic Perspective</div><div>Tonatiuh Rodriguez-Nikl</div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div>Section 3A. Re-imagining how engineering relates to complex sociotechnical systems</div><div>Chapter 12. The Impact of Robot Companions on the Moral Development of Children</div><div>Yvette Pearson and Jason Borenstein</div><div><br></div><div>Chapter 13. Engineering Our Selves: Morphological Freedom and the Myth of Multiplicity</div><div>Joshua Earle</div><div><br></div><div>Section 3B: Reimagining Social Progress in Democracy, and the need to Align Engineering to Social Values</div><div>Chapter 14. Shared Learning to Explore the Philosophies, Policies and Practices of Engineering: The Case of the Atlantic Coast Pipeline</div><div>Rider W. Foley and Elise Barrella</div><div><br></div><div>Chapter 15. Middle Grounds: Art and Pluralism</div><div>Caitlin Foley and Misha Rabinovich </div><div><br></div>Chapter 16. The Artefact on Stage – Object Theatre and Philosophy of Engineering and Technology<div>Albrecht Fritzsche</div><div><br></div><div>Chapter 17. Imagined Systems: How the Speculative Novel Infomocracy offers a Simulation of the Relationship between Democracy, Technology, and Society</div><div>Malka Older and Zachary Pirtle</div><div><br></div><div>Section 4. Provocative Conclusion</div><div>Chapter 18. The Discrete Scaffold for Generic Design, an Interdisciplinary Craft Work for the Future</div><div>Ira Monarch, Eswaran Subrahmanian, Anne-Françoise Schmid, and Muriel Mambrini-Doudet</div>