Yes, the title is meant to catch your eye. But, trust me, there’s a reason for it.When we talk about engineering, your mind probably leaps to blueprints, CAD drawings, graphs: visuals. Most engineers naturally rely on sight. But what if you could be a better and happier engineer by spreading your focus to all your senses?
To be a truly global or expert engineer, you need all your senses—not just your sight (literal or imagined). Synectics: Engineering Through Your Body In Synectics—an inventive design technique—engineers don’t just think; they become part of the system. You might physically mime the motion of a piston, feel the inertia of a valve, or walk through your proposed layout in the car park. This “sensual embodiment” sharpens your intuition about friction, resonance, and balance in ways a CAD model cannot. When you feel the problem, you bypass the limitations of abstract thought—and you often find on solutions faster. Beyond the Visual: A Full Sensory Approach It is worth noting that, with age, you will likely develop subtle multi-sensory awareness: hearing the hum of a motor, feeling the vibration in a bridge truss. But why waiting for that to emerge passively? Instead, you can (should) train your senses deliberately:
A Lesson from Homer via Samuel Florman Engineering isn’t new to sensory thinking. Samuel Florman recounts in The Existential Pleasures of Engineering how Homer’s Odyssey immerses us not just in sight, but in sound, touch, and even smell as Odysseus and Calypso fashion a raft. Florman writes that Homer’s detail brings us deeper into the world of engineering, in an almost romantic sense, by noting how all our senses can be stimulated by the process. Why This Matters We now live in an era reliant upon digital twins and simulations – and the chance of some engineers being replaced by AI. You risk losing the grounding connection to what it feels like, sounds like, smells like. And those are potent feedback channels. By intentionally engaging all your senses, you deepen your connection with the challenge ad your intuition for it. This makes a more effective engineer and you also get more out of the experience: making it more satisfying for you. Take This Forward
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AuthorClint Steele is an expert in how engineering skills are influenced by your background and how you can enhance them once you understand yourself. He has written a book on the - The Global Engineer - and this blog delves further into the topic. Archives
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