I think that you're all arguing different things here. Spell checking isn't quite the same level. Everyone knows that you cannot get 100% success rate with manual checking, without infinite time. It's one thing to proof a 5 page memo manually, it's another to proof a 500-page document manually.
As for calculator usage, I think that you're failing to see that the models in use today can't be checked with a calculator, at least, not in any plausible period of time. For a simple beam, yes, you can. For a 100-story building, good luck with that.
For those in college, are you expecting them to spend 6 yrs to get a BS? Because that's what it would take for them to learn and understand every bit of any complex modelling approach. 50 yrs ago, you spent 4 years in college and got a BS, with no computers, no calculators, no finite element analysis, etc. Today, you spend 4 yrs in college and get a BS, but with computers, calculators, finite element analysis, intro to programming, spreadsheets, etc. Something has to give or people have to spend more time in school.
Much of what I've read here smacks of Luddism. I can imagine the guild-masters of the mid-19th century demanding that textile workers put in the required years of apprenticeship in the weavers guild so that they can understand the intricacies and complexities of weaving, to prepare them to work in textile factories.
While I understand the argumens and partially agree, the modern world and education and work is a different place. My son, freshman in high school, taking honors biology, is being taught stuff we didn't even learn in college. Likewise, he's already completed a class in Java. And he's expected to take at least 4 AP classes, while I graduated when 3 AP classes was already beyond the norm. In order to get all this stuff in, something gets left out. It used to be that Latin was considered to a mandatory requirement for a high school grad, it got cut out because there were other things that had higher priority.
What it all boils down to, is that to progress, you stand on the shoulders of giants. To do that, you have to build on, and not redo, what was done before. No one expects you to re-derive the Laplace transform.
Everyone blithely talks about using a calculator to check the math, but no one has argued that you need to understand the intracies of binary and BCD arithmetic to use a calculator. Why not? Isn't that just as important as understanding how a slide rule works? So shouldn't everyone be using slide rules to verify the math? Is your company going to pay you your salary to verify that Algor's or Mathcads algorithms are all correct and validated?
TTFN
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