sierra
Pre-takeoff checklist
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- Apr 2, 2005
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sierra
the title is actually not quite accurate, since i know a few aero-engineers and they are (well some of them are) creative.
Do those of you who consider yourselves "strict" engineers also consider yourselves to be non-creative? One of the other threads struck me, as someone said something about a topic being too creative for their engineering brain.
I would posit that anyone who is involved in improving a process, developing a process, designing an entity, or planning something must, by default, have a bit of creativity to their psyche. One can't develop out of nothing if one can't bring something different to the table. Perhaps we engineers (and I'm really a hybrid, as I'm a scientist as well) tend to think of our creative tasks as "looking at things from a different angle" rather than as creative tasks.
Just curious.... a case in point would be Rutan's design on SpaceShip 1. Those funny wings were definitely creative.
Do those of you who consider yourselves "strict" engineers also consider yourselves to be non-creative? One of the other threads struck me, as someone said something about a topic being too creative for their engineering brain.
I would posit that anyone who is involved in improving a process, developing a process, designing an entity, or planning something must, by default, have a bit of creativity to their psyche. One can't develop out of nothing if one can't bring something different to the table. Perhaps we engineers (and I'm really a hybrid, as I'm a scientist as well) tend to think of our creative tasks as "looking at things from a different angle" rather than as creative tasks.
Just curious.... a case in point would be Rutan's design on SpaceShip 1. Those funny wings were definitely creative.