Selected Product: | Design Paradigms: Case Histories of Error and Judgment in Engineering Paperback Author: Henry Petroski Publisher: Cambridge University Press Release Date: 1994-05-27 ISBN-10: 0521466490 ISBN-13: 9780521466493 List Price: $33.99 Average Customer Rating: | | Invention by Design; How Engineers Get from Thought to Thing ISBN-10: 0674463684 ISBN-13: 9780674463684 List Price:$19.00 The Evolution of Useful Things: How Everyday Artifacts-From Forks and Pins to Paper Clips and Zippers-Came to be as They are ISBN-10: 0679740392 ISBN-13: 9780679740391 List Price:$14.95 Success through Failure: The Paradox of Design ISBN-10: 0691136424 ISBN-13: 9780691136424 List Price:$18.95 To Engineer Is Human: The Role of Failure in Successful Design ISBN-10: 0679734163 ISBN-13: 9780679734161 List Price:$13.95 Pushing the Limits: New Adventures in Engineering ISBN-10: 1400032946 ISBN-13: 9781400032945 List Price:$14.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Design Paradigms: Case Histories of Error and Judgment in Engineering by Henry Petroski (ISBN-10: 0521466490, ISBN-13: 9780521466493). At this time we have not yet written a review for Design Paradigms: Case Histories of Error and Judgment in Engineering by Henry Petroski (ISBN-10: 0521466490, ISBN-13: 9780521466493). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com From classical temples to twentieth century towers, engineers have learned more about design from failure than from success. The concept of error, according to the author of Design Paradigms, is central to the design process. As a way of explaining the enduring aspects of engineering design, Henry Petroski relates stories of some of the greatest engineering successes and failures of all time. These case studies, drawn from a wide range of times and places, from Ancient Greece and Rome to modern America, serve as paradigms of error and judgment in engineering design. By showing how errors were introduced in the design process and how they might be avoided, the book suggests how better quality and reliability might be achieved in designed devices, structures, and systems of all kinds. Clearly written, with striking illustrations, the book will appeal to engineering students, practicing engineers, historians of science and technology, and all those interested in learning about the process of design. A "Must Read" for Structural Engineers | Customer Rating: | I read this book when it first came out in 1994, and have just finished re-reading it.
I can attest that the lessons which emerge from Dr. Petroski's study of structural engineering failures have proved valuable throughout my career, particularly when designing bridges which pushed the envelope. Indeed, any engineer aiming to be innovative in any way needs to temper that laudable ambition with a serious and even somber study of how things have gone wrong in the past, and this book is an excellent vehicle for that purpose.
Beyond the study of engineering failure, the book also provides nice discussion of important episodes from the history of structural engineering as a fringe benefit. Such historical perspective is usually lacking among engineers both in practice and academia. Yet this is a subject which engineers would ideally be exposed to throughout their careers, not just during the leisurely and retrospective years of retirement.
To give a balanced review, allow me to point out a few minor negatives. First, the writing style is sometimes a bit stuffy, and a more plainspoken style would have made the book more appealing. Second, there's a good bit of repetition throughout the book; shortening and focusing the book would have improved it. Third, the case studies mostly involve bridges; this will obviously please bridge engineers, but will reduce appeal for readers seeking a more diverse range of case studies.
In sum however, the book is an excellent and valuable contribution from Dr. Petroski, and we should be especially thankful that it exists considering the lack of literature on this important topic, especially at a scholarly level.
Highly recommended for bridge engineers and other structural engineers at all stages of their careers - indeed, a "must read."
| Must Read for Every Technical Professional... | Customer Rating: | Many technical professionals (and others as well) think technology has the answers and the solutions to many of the issues / failures we have experienced in the past. WRONG!!
Read this precious book to understand why.
Although somewhat dated (considerting we are in 2006) - the basic tenets still apply. Be forewarned - you need to read it with an open mind and a willingness to be brutally honest about your answers when the author poses some questions to you. With such a paradigm, you will find the book full of value in understanding the types of errors we make as humans. Once you recognize these, preventing them can become feasible. But, just realizing that is not enough, you will need to change (which is very hard to do) some habits that the workplace has built into you over time.
Enjoy - and be error free...if you can, if you care... | Towards More Successful Development | Customer Rating: | | I came across this title while researching the parallels between traditional professional engineering and systems engineering. Petroski makes a compelling case for us to formally study our failures in systems engineering - not for laying blame, but in order to continually improve our processes, assumptions, beliefs, methods, and thinking patterns. Using case studies from bridge building, ship building, and other construction feats, Petroski show us how errors in scalability, design changes, selective use of history, logic, and human factors can lead to disasterous consequences. If you care about public safety and want to see any industry progress to a real level of professionalism, read and study this work. |
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