The Things We Make

The Unknown History of Invention from Cathedrals to Soda Cans

English language

Published June 8, 2023 by Sourcebooks, Incorporated.

ISBN:
978-1-7282-1575-4
Copied ISBN!

View on OpenLibrary

Discover the secret method used to build the world . . . For millennia, humans have used one simple method to solve problems. Whether it's planting crops, building skyscrapers, developing photographs, or designing the first microchip, all creators follow the same steps to engineer progress. But this powerful method, the "engineering method", is an all but hidden process that few of us have heard of-let alone understand-but that influences every aspect of our lives. Bill Hammack, a Carl Sagan Award-winning professor of engineering and viral "The Engineer Guy" on YouTube, has a lifelong passion for the things we make, and how we make them. Now, for the first time, he reveals the invisible method behind every invention and takes us on a whirlwind tour of how humans built the world we know today. From the grand stone arches of medieval cathedrals to the mundane modern soda can, Hammack explains the …

3 editions

A Case Study Heavy Treatise against Techno-Determinism

This could probably be a paper rather than a book, but by including a bevy of detailed case studies Hammack demonstrates why it's important to distinguish engineering from science, their differing methods, and the implications for how we think about and shape innovation. The crux of the argument is that engineering uses rules of thumb, which are informed by observation of the world or science, to build things. That process doesn't have a predetermined end point, and random factors can throw technological development in directions wildly different than its progenitors intended or imagined. I think the line between engineering and science is much blurrier that Hammack argues, and the lack of scientific rigor in his analysis really shows in his overreliance on case studies (see what I did there?). That being said, this is still an important dive into the narratives we build around the technological development process. Highly recommend

avatar for bwaber@bookwyrm.social

rated it