[SystemSafety] Engineering depends on making arguments (was Re: Fwd: Measurement + Control)
Les Chambers
les at chambers.com.au
Mon Dec 16 15:43:35 CET 2013
Michael
I couldn't agree more. Two months ago a man called me with a problem. He was trying to sell a
software product to a bank. The bank wanted independent validation that the product actually
performed all the functions he claimed. He had no functionalional specification so I could make
no argument that it did. No argument - no sale.
Cheers
Les
> > Engineering is not about making "arguments."
>
> At one level, the statement is trivially true. Engineering is (by
> definition) about constructing practical products. The desired end result
> is, for example, a bridge, not the designs and analyses of the bridge.
>
> But at another level, the statement is false. Producing the desired end
> product necessarily requires specification, design, analysis, and associated
> activities. These activities in turn necessarily produce results, which are
> usually embodied in documents. These documents necessarily contain many
> arguments. Some of these arguments may be explicit (for example,
> calculations about the load that a particular truss must support). Some of
> these arguments may be implicit (for example, the implicit argument
> underlying a decision to adopt a particular design as sufficiently safe based
> on the results of a thorough hazard analysis). Whether implicit or explicit,
> arguments permeate every aspect of engineering.
>
> Arguments are not the end product of engineering, as they are of philosophy.
> But without arguments, there is no engineering.
>
> --
>
> C. Michael Holloway
>
> Disclaimer: My opinions are mine alone. Give neither blame nor credit to my
> employer for them.
>
> //
--
Les Chambers
les at chambers.com.au
+61 (0)412 648 992
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