Renaissance Engineering fuses tech, design, management and ethics into a five-year arc, producing leaders who frame widely, decide with evidence, and ship pilot-ready systems.
Thanks for writing this, it clarifies a lot. As a CS teacher, the idea of training polymathic builders for socio-technical problems resonates deeply, especially when thinking about responsible AI development. But what if the "unfamiliar systems" students encounter are fundamentally ethical or societal dilemas that current engineering paradigms ar'nt fully equipped to model or even frame, let alone solve?
Thanks for writing this, it clarifies a lot. As a CS teacher, the idea of training polymathic builders for socio-technical problems resonates deeply, especially when thinking about responsible AI development. But what if the "unfamiliar systems" students encounter are fundamentally ethical or societal dilemas that current engineering paradigms ar'nt fully equipped to model or even frame, let alone solve?
I love societal dilemas. Which ones are your favorite?