Kevin Hall said:
A long time ago one of my teachers told me:"To become a great engineer you should not know everything, you should know where to find everything" and I think that this statement is undisputed.
I tend to find bumper sticker length sayings have a lot of holes in them once you start really thinking about them. Here are some for this topic.
-I only need to know where to find the answer? I would think you would need to add to that the ability to read, comprehend and apply the information once you know where to look. But if all I need to be a good engineer is where it is at, I guess that is easier. Just a game of information hide-and-seek.
-The person who gave this advice, I bet they had to live and work by this concept. Were they a "great engineer"?
-"you should not know everything" is kind of poor advice. If someone was capable of knowing everything or even knowing a lot, we are advising them to stop and change to just knowing where to look?
-Where do you look when you have all the data and information, but you must now make some kind of decision, or create something new?
-A person with the best database on where information is kept but does not know what F=ma means, is the world's greatest engineer. Damn that Dewey Decimal system. It has always been my downfall.
-I bet people will dispute what undisputed means? Does it mean no one has ever disputed this statement? Does it means that all disputes were found to be baseless?
Here's another saying I think is undisputed. "There are 3 kinds of people in this world. Those that can count and those that can't."