DocumentCode :
1217291
Title :
Society´s hopes for the engineer
Author :
Pratt, Haraden
Volume :
34
Issue :
2
fYear :
1946
Abstract :
Like other human institutions, engineering is in a process of continuous evolution. One fundamentally important broadening of the scope, opportunities, and obligations of the engineer is forcefully presented in the following editorial by the Secretary of the IRE (who, it may be mentioned, is himself an outstanding instance of the successful blending and performance in an individual of the functions of the technologist and the industrialist). It is argurdm that an industry, just as a nation, can no longer blunder ahead successfully leaving the technological aspects to chance. It must plan carefully. It cannot proceed far with such plans without expert technical guidance. Forward-looking business administrators will be driven to seek out technically informed persons to become active if not leading elements of their directing organizations. The new awareness of the indispensability of the technical man featuring this postwar era and the now generally prevalent public enthusiasm of expectation create a serious challenge to our engineering profession because it will be the engineer who must become acquainted with the reservoir of scientific knowledge, appraise it in the light of the needs of the life of the people, and then, by judicious interpretation, develop the useful applications. The engineer must better fit himself to meet this obligation and it is to this new opportunity and its problems that I wish to call particular attention.
Keywords :
Communication industry; Defense industry; Engineering profession; Knowledge engineering; Maintenance engineering; Manufacturing industries; Manufacturing processes; Research and development; Weapons;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Proceedings of the IRE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0096-8390
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JRPROC.1946.233561
Filename :
1697023
Link To Document :
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