What quality is most important for engineers

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around identifying the most important qualities for engineers, exploring various attributes such as creativity, intuition, and pragmatism. Participants share personal experiences and perspectives on what they believe contributes to success in engineering, touching on both technical and interpersonal skills.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Exploratory

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants propose that engineering intuition is crucial, emphasizing the ability to recognize problems and devise solutions based on knowledge and experience.
  • Others highlight the importance of creativity and imagination, suggesting these qualities enable engineers to conceptualize and quantify ideas effectively.
  • A participant mentions humility and dedication as key attributes, noting that successful engineers often collaborate well and accept constructive criticism.
  • Another viewpoint stresses the significance of pragmatism, arguing that engineers should focus on practical solutions rather than overly academic approaches to projects.
  • Some participants discuss the role of communication skills in engineering, suggesting that these are essential even for those in technical roles.
  • Concerns are raised about the balance between hands-on skills and theoretical knowledge, with some expressing difficulty in practical applications.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of opinions on the most important qualities for engineers, indicating that there is no consensus. Multiple competing views remain regarding the significance of intuition, creativity, humility, pragmatism, and communication skills.

Contextual Notes

Some discussions reflect personal experiences and subjective interpretations of qualities, which may vary widely among different engineering fields and roles.

k4br0ntx
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Creativity?
Math Intellect?
Other?
 
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Depends. I think the most important quality is engineering intuition. Recognizing what you are seeing, and what to do with it.
 
Can you please elaborate? I love math and data. However I'm not good with "hands on" things.
 
Me neither. That's why I left engineering, plus it became boring to me.

Intuition is the ability to quickly identify the problem, and by searching your knowledge be able to find a possible solution, perhaps sketch a solution. Later, you may open books or search for papers to finalize the solution.
 
What do you do now?
 
k4br0ntx said:
What do you do now?

I changed to Economics.

Zero hands on, and bunch of math :biggrin:
 
That sounds interesting. Is the money good in economics?
 
k4br0ntx said:
That sounds interesting. Is the money good in economics?

Yes, but it is better for PhD graduates.
 
It's the imagination, followed by ability to quantify things
 
  • #10
I'm simply a co-op engineer working with other engineers, but the two attributes I've found to be most important in other engineers I've seen are humility and dedication. If you have graduated with a BS, it proves you can figure out the types of problems you're given. But it doesn't necessarily qualify you as a 'team player'. The engineers I've seen who are willing to help others, take criticism with a positive attitude, and work hard seem to be the happiest and succeed the most. That's just what I've seen, anyways. And they're the ones I like spending the most time around, and I ask them questions when I need help. The 'sensitive' or 'touchy' engineers who refuse to take correction can be very difficult to work with.

EDIT: I listed these two attributes assuming one has at least decent capabilities in performing one's job. If an engineer can't use a computer, calculator, perform basic to intermediate math, or be able to analyze a system or problem then it's going to be difficult to do anything as an engineer, really.
 
Last edited:
  • #11
Intuition is a pretty good answer. Some intuition comes from experience and some is more an abstract ability.

Intuition gives you two things very important to design:

1.) The ability to see problems before they happen. How well can you look at a solution and see the problem areas before ever building and testing the design. This saves a ton of time and money.

2.) Troubleshooting. How quickly can you divide a problem up to isolate a problem and determine a solution. This all feeds back into 1 as can you predict what new problems your fixes may cause, because that happens a lot.
 
  • #12
Pragmatism
 
  • #13
Jobrag said:
Pragmatism

I second that! I believe that you need to focus to get a job done applying just as much math (...and tools and frameworks and software... etc.) as needed to get this job done.

I have sometimes observed that professionals new to a field fail because they try to turn a customer project into sort of an academic exercise - as if it would be required to get a paper out of the project. Sometimes rules of thumb are sufficient.

It depends if this turns you down because it makes tasks too menial or if you consider this the specific challenge in engineering.

In addition I believe communication skills are important, also if your official role is that of a technical expert.
 

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