de.bug
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Scientist Vs Engineer
hello
What is the difference between an Engineer and a Scientist?
hello
What is the difference between an Engineer and a Scientist?
Pkruse said:Where I work, an engineer is a scientist who makes practical application of what he knows.
Skrambles said:One uses the symbol I for electric current and the other uses i.
When I first saw the title of this thread I thought the question would be "If a scientist and an engineer got into a fight, who would win?"
The engineerer has a concrete problem and seeks a suitable solution.de.bug said:What Is the Difference Between a Scientist and an Engineer?
11thHeaven said:Hi all, new here :)
I'm neither an engineer or a scientist but I think the difference in their roles can be roughly summarised as follows:
A scientist seeks to discover new knowledge.
An engineer seeks to apply existing knowledge.
So a scientist will try to discover the laws of motion and what causes electrical currents, whearas the engineer will try to use this knowledge (once it's been established) to invent cars, televisions, etc.
tygerdawg said:My (US Engineer) perspective:
Surviving an Engineering curriculum at the Bachelor's level will teach one how to solve problems. Getting through a Master's Engineering program in graduate school teaches one how to learn new subjects and deep analysis. The Ph.D. develops a skill in deep thinking and analysis, and to independently develop new insights.
In industry, engineers have constraints imposed upon them such as production schedules, finish dates, budget limitations, and limited resources (financial, physical, equipment, & personnel). The perception is that engineers are there to solve the problems of those conflicting constraints and "make it happen" to get the project completed or the products out the door in order to make revenue. It involves technical compromises, cutting corners but maintaining <whatever important criteria>, and occasional negotiating with a variety of stakeholders to accept other-than-specified parameters or changes of project scope or completion dates or budgets.
Not to seem disparaging in any way, but my experience with "scientists" is that they are often more narrow in scope and perception; focused on the task of discovery rather than the results; appear to value their worth via individual accolades (e.g., paper authorship) rather than an engineer's desire to show successful completion of projects.
My experience is that there is distinct difference in thought processes and motivations. But I think that there is a place for both in the world, and many times in the same company.