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by skribanto
385 days ago
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My interpretation is that as engineers, we attempt to justify all of our choices through purely rational means. However, as humans, we cannot really make said choices without also being at least somewhat influenced by our subjective affections. Perhaps I'm stretching the author's message, but at least I believe that the argument extends to all engineering conclusions. The author's call is that we acknowledge this subjective side. Essentially, true engineering is about tradeoffs, there is no X that is objectively better than Y in all circumstances and contexts. |
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I think that acknowledging the subjective side is a necessary step to making more rational choices. If you don't know your motivations, you will be a motivated reasoner.
When you can add "I like this tech because it helps me build an identity I aspire to" as an item in the pros column, you realize you no longer have to.