Reviews
The aim is to blend history, engineering, ethics, and philosophy into the design process with implications for the future curricula of engineering design courses.
Just the sort of resource that everyong from civil engineers to historians of technology will find helpful in guiding students to appreciate some of the complexities and subtleties of the profession and practice of engineering.
Pfatteicher's retrospective on more than 100 years of engineering history in North America through the lens of the 9/11 experience is a unique contribution to engineering self-understanding. It is a valuable contribution to ongoing reform in engineering education.
A valuable addition to the literature and an excellent source for illustrating the shortcomings of conventional engineering problem solving.
Book Details
Introduction: Why?
1. "A Very Imperfect Process": Engineering Problem-Solving
2. "Finding Hope in the Ruins": A Short History of Engineering Disasters
3. "A New Era": The Limits of Engineering Expertise
Introduction: Why?
1. "A Very Imperfect Process": Engineering Problem-Solving
2. "Finding Hope in the Ruins": A Short History of Engineering Disasters
3. "A New Era": The Limits of Engineering Expertise in a Post-9 /11 World
4. "Safe from Every Possible Event": How to Strive for the Impossible
5. "Architectural Terrorism": Why Moderation Matters
6. "These Material Things": Passion and Power in Engineering
Conclusion: "More Time for the Dreaming": Engineering Curricula for the Twenty-First Century
Acknowledgments
Notes
Recommended Reading
Index