Science V Engineering

Science V Engineering

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Discussion

Thorodin

Original Poster:

2,459 posts

134 months

Monday 23rd September 2013
quotequote all
Newcomer, just found this other universe and having overcome the inertia of the political forum hope to expand at an ever increasing pace my tenuous grasp of science.

The scientist versus the engineer argument is fraught with unknowns, anomalies, guesses and approximate solutions (ie: when you can't find an answer invent a new variable that completes the equation). The following exemplifies the dilemma:


Problem:
You are standing 20’ from a beautiful woman. You are told you can take as many steps towards her as you like but they must always be half the remaining distance between the two of you. How many steps would you take to reach her?

Solution:
The scientist would say: You can never reach her because of infinity.
The engineer would say: Eight steps would do, for all practical purposes.


Proof:
None. Have never been lucky enough to reach agreement on proximity.

grumbledoak

31,548 posts

234 months

Monday 23rd September 2013
quotequote all
The scientist deserves a slap. He should have heard of Wossname's Turtle.


I wonder how many turtles it took to work it out... scratchchin

Thorodin

Original Poster:

2,459 posts

134 months

Monday 23rd September 2013
quotequote all
One, or maybe two. Over a rather long period of relative time.

anonymous-user

55 months

Monday 23rd September 2013
quotequote all
Fundamentally flawed question. The beautiful woman would already be moving away from those two nerds at a high enough velocity to avoid any interaction, scientific or social........ ;-)

Simpo Two

85,549 posts

266 months

Monday 23rd September 2013
quotequote all
In theory the scientist is right - you would never reach her. In practice you might be brave enough to span the last few inches with your arms, at which point she would scream and run away. But you did reach her, briefly, before the police arrived.

AER

1,142 posts

271 months

Tuesday 24th September 2013
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Max_Torque said:
Fundamentally flawed question. The beautiful woman would already be moving away from those two nerds at a high enough velocity to avoid any interaction, scientific or social........ ;-)
Nerdy is the new cool, but if you're ugly there's still no helping you...

Guvernator

13,164 posts

166 months

Wednesday 25th September 2013
quotequote all
Well I don't know the answer to the original question but I do know that in the Science Vs Engineering hierarchy, engineers are seen as the poor relations to scientists, at least according to the Big Bang Theory (where I get all my science advise from these days) where Sheldon takes constant delight in telling Wolowitz that his engineering degree is not as good as a science one. biggrinbiggrin

AJI

5,180 posts

218 months

Thursday 26th September 2013
quotequote all
Scientists provide the knowledge for Engineers to use in the practical world.

There is no hierarchy, just two 'pedestals' of great professions.

Without scientists we wouldn't have the knowledge.
Without engineers that knowledge would go to waste.



Halmyre

11,215 posts

140 months

Thursday 26th September 2013
quotequote all
Guvernator said:
Well I don't know the answer to the original question but I do know that in the Science Vs Engineering hierarchy, engineers are seen as the poor relations to scientists, at least according to the Big Bang Theory (where I get all my science advise from these days) where Sheldon takes constant delight in telling Wolowitz that his engineering degree is not as good as a science one. biggrinbiggrin
But Sheldon rags on *everybody* for being inferior.

GadgeS3C

4,516 posts

165 months

Thursday 26th September 2013
quotequote all
AJI said:
Scientists provide the knowledge for Engineers to use in the practical world.

There is no hierarchy, just two 'pedestals' of great professions.

Without scientists we wouldn't have the knowledge.
Without engineers that knowledge would go to waste.
Sometimes the knowledge comes after the engineering - this can be a good or a bad thing...

Mr2Mike

20,143 posts

256 months

Tuesday 1st October 2013
quotequote all
Thorodin said:
The scientist would say: You can never reach her because of infinity.
No he wouldn't, unless maybe he was a 'scientist' on the IPCC. "There will be no artic ice left by 2040 because of infinity" sounds at least as plausible as the rest of their models.

rhinochopig

17,932 posts

199 months

Tuesday 1st October 2013
quotequote all
AJI said:
Scientists provide the knowledge for Engineers to use in the practical world.

There is no hierarchy, just two 'pedestals' of great professions.

Without scientists we wouldn't have the knowledge.
Without engineers that knowledge would go to waste.
I thought it was TV celebs from the 70s and 80s that were mostly pedestals?

98elise

26,646 posts

162 months

Tuesday 1st October 2013
quotequote all
Guvernator said:
Well I don't know the answer to the original question but I do know that in the Science Vs Engineering hierarchy, engineers are seen as the poor relations to scientists, at least according to the Big Bang Theory (where I get all my science advise from these days) where Sheldon takes constant delight in telling Wolowitz that his engineering degree is not as good as a science one. biggrinbiggrin
Its mostly because Wolowitz has a Masters not a Doctorate, so he can't call himself Doctor. The others have PhD's (obviously excluding Penny!) hence are referred to as Doctor.

Doctor Sheldon Cooper: "May I introduce Dr Hofstadter, Dr Koothrappali and MR. Wolowitz."

Engineers don't normally go for a Doctorate (D.Eng), but if they do they they can be addressed as a Doctor (of Engineering).

Otispunkmeyer

12,611 posts

156 months

Thursday 10th October 2013
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98elise said:
Guvernator said:
Well I don't know the answer to the original question but I do know that in the Science Vs Engineering hierarchy, engineers are seen as the poor relations to scientists, at least according to the Big Bang Theory (where I get all my science advise from these days) where Sheldon takes constant delight in telling Wolowitz that his engineering degree is not as good as a science one. biggrinbiggrin
Its mostly because Wolowitz has a Masters not a Doctorate, so he can't call himself Doctor. The others have PhD's (obviously excluding Penny!) hence are referred to as Doctor.

Doctor Sheldon Cooper: "May I introduce Dr Hofstadter, Dr Koothrappali and MR. Wolowitz."

Engineers don't normally go for a Doctorate (D.Eng), but if they do they they can be addressed as a Doctor (of Engineering).
Plus while Sheldon may mock the lack of Doctoral status, Howard is the one that gets to build things for NASA and go to space and he gets to play with Bernadette. I know which character I'd like to be put it that way! (I'm surprised she doesn't fall over, how does such a small person cope with baps like those!)

Thorodin

Original Poster:

2,459 posts

134 months

Thursday 10th October 2013
quotequote all
AJI said:
Scientists provide the knowledge for Engineers to use in the practical world.

Without scientists we wouldn't have the knowledge.
Without engineers that knowledge would go to waste.
Many esteemed bodies are populated by pseudo scientists and engineers. They are hard to spot. Pseudo engineers’ bridges fall down. Pseudo scientists’ theorems never get tested because real engineers can spot a dodgy idea a mile off.

Simpo Two

85,549 posts

266 months

Thursday 10th October 2013
quotequote all
I remain disappointed that The Big Bang Theory is not about the big bang theory. And that Life on Mars is not about life on Mars, but some herbert in an Audi.

Thorodin

Original Poster:

2,459 posts

134 months

Thursday 10th October 2013
quotequote all
I’m embarrassed to admit I have trouble with the “think of it as a balloon, forever expanding” theory.
If that means everything is travelling away from us surely the distances between objects get greater – weakening gravity. And we know how dangerous that is. I mean, if that’s the case what’s all the palaver about asteroids colliding with us?

HowMuchLonger

3,004 posts

194 months

Thursday 10th October 2013
quotequote all
Unless the scientist used approximate reasoning.

There is a posibility value 0 of it taking 1 step.
There is a posibility value 1 of it taking 10 steps.

Edited by HowMuchLonger on Thursday 10th October 21:20

HowMuchLonger

3,004 posts

194 months

Thursday 10th October 2013
quotequote all
98elise said:
Engineers don't normally go for a Doctorate (D.Eng), but if they do they they can be addressed as a Doctor (of Engineering).
Engineering Doctorate is an EngD.
At least that is my one (in process of)

Simpo Two

85,549 posts

266 months

Thursday 10th October 2013
quotequote all
Thorodin said:
If that means everything is travelling away from us surely the distances between objects get greater – weakening gravity.
Nope, gravity is a function of mass. Each body has the same gravity regardless of its distance from another body.

The question is whether the universe has enough collective gravity to slow down and then contract back into another big bang, or keep going. Has anyone worked it out yet? Perhaps it will simply stop in perfect celestial equilibrium...?