Dear Robert,

as an engineer with more than 53 years practice, in my opinion
the definitory virtues of an engineer are;
a) Problem solving mentality and ability (real life problems);
b) Dedication to technological progress in his field
c)Work discipline in sys-thinking (systematic and system based)
d) Creative teamwork

I would be pleased if you read:
http://egooutpeters.blogspot.ro/2011/08/technology-mon-amour.html

As a a positive example, please consider the Defkalion team.

And also essential for engineering, management and business is
FASTNESS.

Peter


On Fri, May 24, 2013 at 10:03 AM, Robert Lynn <
[email protected]> wrote:

> Strange, in my observation 3 things define the best engineers I know (of
> few hundred I have met):
> 1 Excellent/encyclopedic memory - at least for engineering stuff, may not
> be able to remember their friends names or where they put their keys.
> 2 Good at mental calculation (assess what-ifs quickly).
> 3 Powerful work ethic.
>
> Raw smarts help too.
>
>
> On 23 May 2013 23:05, Jed Rothwell <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Craig <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>
>>> . . . it doesn't surprise me
>>>
>>> that someone with a poor memory can also be an excellent engineer. The
>>> two traits go together. With me, for instance, it's because I have a
>>> hard time remembering, that I have become an excellent problem solver.
>>> When I look at code that I've written, just a few months earlier; it's
>>> like looking at new code which I've never seen before. I then have to
>>> reconstruct the solutions to the problems -- again -- from scratch.
>>>
>>
>> That is an interesting observation. I have the same kind of mind. I too
>> see programs afresh the next day.
>>
>> That is helpful for jobs that require you to do the same thing over and
>> over, year after year, such as teaching 5th grade. I imagine you would be
>> bored to tears doing that if you could not find the same old historylesson
>> interesting the 10th time around.
>>
>> I suppose Yul Brynner must have had this quality since he was able to
>> perform "The King And I" on stage 4,625 (!) times. I guess that is a good
>> thing.
>>
>> I think that the ability to forget is essential to many formsof
>> creativity. There are people who do not forget things. They have prodigious
>> memories and they can remember details from years or decades ago. If this
>> ability gave us an evolutionary advantage everyone would have it. Since
>> most of us tend to forget things I assume that promotes survival in natural
>> circumstances.
>>
>> - Jed
>>
>>
>


-- 
Dr. Peter Gluck
Cluj, Romania
http://egooutpeters.blogspot.com

Reply via email to