74 Quotes by Henry Petroski

  • Author Henry Petroski
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    It has been said, by engineers themselves, that given enough money, they can accomplish virtually anything: send men to the moon, dig a tunnel under the English Channel. There's no reason they couldn't likewise devise ways to protect infrastructure from the worst hurricanes, earthquakes and other calamities, natural and manmade.

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  • Author Henry Petroski
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    Betting on the success of innovative technologies in the marketplace can carry all the uncertainty and risk that betting on the next card in the deck does at a blackjack table in Las Vegas. There is a factor of randomness that must be factored in, but precisely how to do so is anyone's guess.

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  • Author Henry Petroski
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    It seems to be a law of design that for every advantage introduced through redesign, there is an accompanying unintended disadvantage.

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  • Author Henry Petroski
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    Failure is Central to engineering. Every single calculation that an engineer makes is a failure calculation.

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  • Author Henry Petroski
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    You can almost say that a design error is a human error because, after all, it's we humans who do the designing.

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  • Author Henry Petroski
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    Any design, whether it's for a ship or an airplane, must be done in anticipation of potential failures.

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  • Author Henry Petroski
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    Many of the familiar little things that we use every day have typically evolved over a period of time to a state of familiarity. They balance form and function, elegance and economy, success and failure in ways that are not only acceptable, but also admirable.

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  • Author Henry Petroski
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    Too much redesign has to do more with fad and fashion than with fitness and function. It is change for the sake of change. Such redesign is not only unnecessary, it is all too often also retrogressive, leading to things that work less effectively than those they were designed to replace.

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  • Author Henry Petroski
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    I was always told that I was good in mathematics, and I guess my grades and standardized test scores supported that. My worst subjects were those that generally involved a lot of reading - English and history. So, having good test scores in math and mediocre ones in reading, I was naturally advised to major in engineering in college.

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