Comment by j2kun

4 months ago

> Engineers design and build things on top of the discoveries of scientists

I agree with a lot in this post, but I think it's also worth mentioning how this is a two-way street. Practical considerations often drive theory research as much as the other way around.

I like to imagine that thermodynamics happened because industrial metallurgy and boiler design advanced to the point where people started asking "what are the fundamental constraints?"

There's a chance that it didn't actually happen that way, though.

edit: I also heard that Louis Pasteur did work for breweries, answering the question "Why do some batches come out nasty while most are fine, given the same inputs?"

  • The history of steam engines would suggest that our understanding of thermodynamics developed out of a large base of first-hand experience. Same story for Calculus. And the t-statistic was developed by a QA guy (student) at Guinness.