DocumentCode
1349636
Title
The engineer: The engineer and public policy-making: Like a gladiator with one arm bound behind him, the engineer enters the public arena handicapped by personality and training
Author
Tribus, Myron
Author_Institution
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Volume
15
Issue
4
fYear
1978
fDate
4/1/1978 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
48
Lastpage
51
Abstract
During the French Revolution, a priest, a lawyer, and an engineer were put on trial as enemies of the Revolution. The priest tried to defend himself by explaining how he had ministered to the poor, brought food to the hungry, and tended the sick. To no avail. He was sentenced to the guillotine. In those days, when a person felt he had been sentenced unjustly, he would demonstrate his feelings by making the supreme gesture ¿ he would lie face up rather than face down in the guillotine. The priest did so. When the rope was tripped, it happened that the blade stuck in the channel about six inches above his neck. It was the rule that if ever the guillotine stuck, the victim was let free. So the priest was spared.
Keywords
Blades; Computational modeling; Computers; Decision making; Educational institutions; Games; Government;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Spectrum, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9235
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MSPEC.1978.6367669
Filename
6367669
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