Framing Arguments in a Technical Controversy: Assumptions about Science and Technology in the Decision to Launch the Space Shuttle Challenger
- 1 April 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Technical Writing and Communication
- Vol. 23 (2) , 99-114
- https://doi.org/10.2190/1wjk-jhv5-k071-03jt
Abstract
This article explores the assumptions about science and technology held by the engineers who attempted to delay the launch of the Challenger space shuttle. These assumptions, it is argued, affected the ways in which the engineers framed the arguments used to persuade managers not to launch. Examining the decision making processes prior to the tragedy reveals three dominant conceptions of science and technology which guided the engineers' persuasive efforts, and which appear to account for why the engineers did not succeed in their attempt to influence the managers.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- The rhetoric of expertise: E. O. Wilson and sociobiologyQuarterly Journal of Speech, 1990
- “Punctuated equilibria”: Rhetorical dynamics of a scientific controversyQuarterly Journal of Speech, 1986
- A critical analysis of factors related to decisional processes involved in the challenger disasterCentral States Speech Journal, 1986