geoman77
Geotechnical
- Feb 11, 2011
- 10
I recently had a senior engineer get rather miffed that I had used the word "conservative" on some foundation calcs that I did. He essentially said, "Think about what that word means. You're not being conservative; just say what you really mean."
I think what he's suggesting is that we often use the word conservative to imply that we're assigning values that we know to be too large (or too small, depending on the situation), when in reality we simply don't have an accurate handle on the "real" value. In other words, we're not actually being conservative; we're being purposefully broad to cover our lack of knowledge. Or something like that...
Any thoughts?
I think what he's suggesting is that we often use the word conservative to imply that we're assigning values that we know to be too large (or too small, depending on the situation), when in reality we simply don't have an accurate handle on the "real" value. In other words, we're not actually being conservative; we're being purposefully broad to cover our lack of knowledge. Or something like that...
Any thoughts?