Philippe D’Anjou (An Ethics of Freedom for Architectural Practice by Philippe D’Anjou in Journal of Architectural Education, March 2011) proposed the following points to help architects develop a clear awareness of their freedom and responsibility in architectural design:

  1. Acknowledgment of design freedom: The designer has choices in design.
  2. Acceptance of complete design responsibility: The designer must accept responsibility for those choices and can’t pass the buck to committees or codes.
  3. Consideration of past design choices: The past is prologue and influences current decisions.
  4. Consideration of influencing forces of external design agents involved in the design project situation: Designers may consider what others advise but must be responsible for the choice of what to do with that advice.
  5. Consideration of the factual design conditions of the design project situation: There are some things designers can’t change (e.g., physical features) and so must take responsibility for how they factor those issues into design choices.
  6. Enacting the design choice that most reflects both freedom awareness and personal responsibility acceptance: Making the choice is the outcome of the process.

The above six points are applicable to other decision-making situations and are especially useful in helping decision-makers understand even external influences don’t relieve decision-makers of the responsibility for their choices.