This document discusses the importance of visualization and developing the "mind's eye" in engineering. It covers how engineers use diagrams, models, and other visualization tools to understand complex systems and solve problems. While analysis and calculation are important, the document emphasizes that engineers must also develop practical judgment and an intuitive "feel" for how designs will perform in the real world. It warns that over-reliance on mathematical models without consideration of practical realities can lead to dangerous ignorance and engineering failures. Overall, the document argues that engineering education must better foster non-verbal thinking skills and hands-on learning to develop engineers that can effectively move between theoretical analysis and real-world application.
This document discusses the importance of visualization and developing the "mind's eye" in engineering. It covers how engineers use diagrams, models, and other visualization tools to understand complex systems and solve problems. While analysis and calculation are important, the document emphasizes that engineers must also develop practical judgment and an intuitive "feel" for how designs will perform in the real world. It warns that over-reliance on mathematical models without consideration of practical realities can lead to dangerous ignorance and engineering failures. Overall, the document argues that engineering education must better foster non-verbal thinking skills and hands-on learning to develop engineers that can effectively move between theoretical analysis and real-world application.
This document discusses the importance of visualization and developing the "mind's eye" in engineering. It covers how engineers use diagrams, models, and other visualization tools to understand complex systems and solve problems. While analysis and calculation are important, the document emphasizes that engineers must also develop practical judgment and an intuitive "feel" for how designs will perform in the real world. It warns that over-reliance on mathematical models without consideration of practical realities can lead to dangerous ignorance and engineering failures. Overall, the document argues that engineering education must better foster non-verbal thinking skills and hands-on learning to develop engineers that can effectively move between theoretical analysis and real-world application.
This document discusses the importance of visualization and developing the "mind's eye" in engineering. It covers how engineers use diagrams, models, and other visualization tools to understand complex systems and solve problems. While analysis and calculation are important, the document emphasizes that engineers must also develop practical judgment and an intuitive "feel" for how designs will perform in the real world. It warns that over-reliance on mathematical models without consideration of practical realities can lead to dangerous ignorance and engineering failures. Overall, the document argues that engineering education must better foster non-verbal thinking skills and hands-on learning to develop engineers that can effectively move between theoretical analysis and real-world application.
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Engineering and the Minds Eye
Author: Eugene S. Ferguson
Presented by: Nikhil Singh the minds eye is a well developed organ that not only reviews the contents of a visual memory but also forms such new or modified images as the minds thought require
The mind's eye, the locus of our images of
remembered reality and imagined contrivance, is an organ of incredible capacity and subtlety. Collecting and interpreting much more than the information [entering the optical eyes], the mind's eye is an organ in which a lifetime of sensory information [in all its forms] -- is stored, interconnected and interrelated. The nature of Engineering Design the differences between the direct design of the artisan and the design drawing of the engineer are differences of format rather than differences of conception Design has two principal purposes Show the designers how the ideas look on paper They show the workers all idea needed to produce the object Designs are based on practical judgments The case of design of airplanes Design as Invention invention causes things to come into existence from ideas, makes world conform to thought; whereas science, by deriving ideas from observation, makes though confirm to existence
form follows function is not true.
Newcomens design of steam engine to power a water pump Design as Invention Because inventors and designers nearly always devise new combinations of familiar elements to accomplish novel results, links to known technology are inevitably present
a creative technologist possesses a mental
set of stock solutions from which he draws in addressing problems Edisons rotating drum or cylinder The process of Design 1900 designers were in touch with world they have designed, e.g. Ohio Railroad Late 1950s only sketches would suffice 1961-Panoramic Design Technique Block diagram cant explain the process as The idea is in engineers mind long before need being articulated Steps in design process maybe all going at once The process design is not a totally formal affair, drawings and specifications come into existence as a result of a social process. Members of a design group can be expected to have divergent views of the most desirable ways to accomplish the work. Designers engage in informal negotiations, discussions, laughter, and banter as they wind their way to the final outcome. Like learning, design is a social process. Origins of Modern Engineering at least 80 percent of engineers work with technologies have been around for decades or even centuries Bronze water pumps used in Roman mines The secret of design For the plans to be effective the system being planned must be predictable and controllable 1720 Artillery School, 1749 Military Engineering, 1775 School of civil work designing, 1794 polytechnique in Paris The tools of visualization Pictorial Perspective (linear perspective) Fifteenth century one eyed observer rooted at the spot Orthographic projections engineering drawing Shows three views of the subject Eighteenth century Study Models Acquaint observers with unfamiliar structures Fourteenth century Tools of visual analysis the advantages of graphical statics are qualitative, presenting in the calculations a sense of what's going on a feel and permitting the engineer to build in the minds eye a vision of forces in a complex structure
Answer questions such as Does it look right
and Are the numerical answers reasonable Promise and Performance Refers to Henry Petroskis book
The computers apparent precision, can give
engineers an unwarranted confidence in the validity of the resulting numbers
Engineers need to be constantly reminded
that all engineering failures result from faulty judgments rather than faulty calculations Summary/Quotes An engineering education that neglects nonverbal thinking, such as diagramming techniques and skills, produces a new breed of engineers who are dangerously ignorant of reality and the ways in which it differs from mathematical models constructed in academia
engineers must "think and communicate
visually." Summary/Quotes "Elite engineering schools are increasingly turning out students more familiar with mathematics than machinery: graduates, as one working engineer told me a decade ago, 'who can't make anything, not anything I need.' That is about as cruel as you can be in talking about an engineer."
The real problem of engineering education is the
implicit acceptance of the notion that high-status analytical courses are superior to those that encourage the student to develop an intuitive "feel" for the incalculable complexity of engineering practice in the real world. Thank you