Caption: PRX default Piece image
PRX default Piece image 

Roman Engineering

From: William S. Hammack
Series: Stories of Technology
Length: 02:27

Engineering is part of our western heritage. We often hear of the western Canon in Literature, but our technology also has ancient roots. Read the full description.

Default-piece-image-0 In many ways the engineering achievements of the Greeks pale when compared to the Romans, who were most proud of their work, especially the aqueducts. Here is the cry of the aqueducts Roman Administrator: "I ask you, just compare with the vast monuments of this vital aqueduct those useless pyramids, or the good-for-nothing tourists attractions of the Greeks!" Without realizing it, he was highlighting the great contribution of the Romans to engineering: They set the profession firmly on economic principles. And with this, they paved the way for our consumer culture. Consider the aqueducts. The Roman people didn't really need them. For washing, drinking and irrigation they could get water from nearby. But the Roman people wanted huge baths: They were a way to escape the blazing Mediterranean summer, or get warm in winter - and a place to meet and converse. We'd compare the baths today to a coffee house or a sidewalk cafe.

To hear the full audio, sign up for a free PRX account or log in.

Also in the Stories of Technology series

Caption: PRX default Piece image

Adam Osborne: Computer Pioneer (02:43)
From: William S. Hammack

Adam Osborne marketed the first successful a compact computer: A 24-pound portable computer!
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Potholes (02:47)
From: William S. Hammack

A pothole is a uniquely American phenomenon. Drive the highways of South Africa, Germany or France and you'll find few ruts and divots. Why potholes in America and not everywhere?
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Google (02:47)
From: William S. Hammack

But information, of course, isn't knowledge ... and therein lies Google great success.
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Concorde (02:51)
From: William S. Hammack

With the Concorde soon to stop flying, an era of air transport has come to an end. Unknown to most people the era ending is the 1950s, and the Concorde is one of the greatest ...
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Jack Kilby RIP (02:15)
From: William S. Hammack

Jack Kilby invented the microchip, and thus, indirectly, helped me to learn to dance.
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Voice over IP (VOIP) (02:44)
From: William S. Hammack

While VOIP is popular it is a difficult problem to make it work with 9-1-1.
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Power Plants & efficiency (02:21)
From: William S. Hammack

Most power plants waste much energy because they are so inefficient. Moving them closer to where their power is used would waste much less energy
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Firefox Browser and Open Source (02:27)
From: William S. Hammack

The Firefox browser represents the pinnacle of open source software, this commentary explains the open source movement.
Caption: PRX default Piece image

HeLa Cells (02:27)
From: William S. Hammack

We owe a major step in the eradication of polio, and a host of other diseases, to one unsung person. I'd say hero, but this person never knew what they did. Henerietta ...
Caption: PRX default Piece image

Ice Cream (02:28)
From: William S. Hammack

Making ice cream is a tricky business - its a careful mixture of air bubbles, globes of oil and ice crystals suspended in water.

Piece Description

In many ways the engineering achievements of the Greeks pale when compared to the Romans, who were most proud of their work, especially the aqueducts. Here is the cry of the aqueducts Roman Administrator: "I ask you, just compare with the vast monuments of this vital aqueduct those useless pyramids, or the good-for-nothing tourists attractions of the Greeks!" Without realizing it, he was highlighting the great contribution of the Romans to engineering: They set the profession firmly on economic principles. And with this, they paved the way for our consumer culture. Consider the aqueducts. The Roman people didn't really need them. For washing, drinking and irrigation they could get water from nearby. But the Roman people wanted huge baths: They were a way to escape the blazing Mediterranean summer, or get warm in winter - and a place to meet and converse. We'd compare the baths today to a coffee house or a sidewalk cafe.

Broadcast History

See series description

Transcript

I learned yesterday that I'm a member of the world's oldest profession.
I read this in an article on "engineering" in the the Encyclopedia Britannica. Its main point is captured by this favorite quote of mine from a scientist. He said, "a good scientist is a person with original ideas. A good engineer is a person who makes a design that works with as few original ideas as possible." This is the essence of all good engineering today. In fact, this way of thinking is part of our western heritage.

We often hear of the western Canon in Literature, but we have another western heritage: engineering. When we trace our roots in literature we start with Homer's Iliad or Odyssey. But as an engineer I don't think of ancient Greece as a nation of poets, but as a nation of merchants who built wealth to hire engineers to build huge things.

We still see Greek architecture in our museums, banks and ch...
Read the full transcript

Related Website

http://www.engineerguy.com