Dear Dr. Barua,
Thank you for raising such a rich and reflective topic - it's something I've often thought about myself.
Personally, I believe creativity is either part of someone's nature or it isn't - and this applies to engineers just as much as to artists. Having technical experience is important, of course, but even without decades of seniority, an engineer can approach their work with a creative mindset.
It may not be "artistic" in the classical sense, but I can tell you - I absolutely feel like a creative soul when I'm developing a complex cost estimate or assembling a detailed project schedule! π
You can approach engineering work in a dry, mechanical way - or you can bring life to it by caring about the details. For me, details are creativity. A blue frame around a report may not solve a structural problem, but it reflects the engineer's personality - and the thoughtful design behind the work.
Of course, if the entire document is technically flawed, no amount of creative flair will help. That's why I agree - true engineering creativity requires a balance: competence plus imagination.
Thank you again for sparking this conversation. I'm eager to read what others think too!
Warm regards,
Darya Stanskova
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Darya Stanskova Aff.M.ASCE
Cost Estimator, Construction Engineer, Power Engineer, Project Manager
Clearwater FL
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Original Message:
Sent: 06-17-2025 10:32 PM
From: Dilip Barua
Subject: An Engineer's Freedom and Creativity
In all theoretical definitions 'Creativity' is described . . . as one of the fundamental requirements of engineering practices and management philosophy . . . Creativity and freedom are intertwined β and based on materials (excerpts in italics) presented in 2.2 An Engineer's Freedom and Creativity of Civil Engineering on Seashore . . . Creativity connotes freedom β freedom of choice, freedom of alternative thinking . . . But . . . engineering creativity is not like the creative works of many β for example, of an artist . . .
The above statements, and perhaps more, lead us to ask: What does an engineer's creativity mean then? Do engineers enjoy same freedom like others to be creative? How do the causes of constraints a practicing engineer faces β condition creativity? Do they feel complacent about their efforts β having an umbrella of Standards, Codes and Manuals shielding them?
Brooding over, here are what one can start with:
I came up with a short answer: for all different reasons . . . an engineer does not enjoy much of a freedom like others β therefore has less latitude to be creative . . . Does it sound right?
Something agreeable perhaps . . . An engineer's creativity is based on his or her level of skill and experience. . . . This, what to do and how to fix is the crux of engineering creativity . . . Something different from what we usually understand of creativity β is it not?
How to categorize and qualify an engineer's works β let's say, from some sort of direction setting to project implementation β from more degrees of freedom to less. Here are something I thought of: Class A Engineering Freedom . . . to Class D Engineering Freedom . . . How do they sound?
This subject-matter is posted as a stand-alone topic following Mitch's suggestion during our interactions in Engineer vs. Economist post . . .
This is an interesting and important topic β I guess many have something to says on this β something enriched with valuable experiences, thoughts and opinions.
Dilip
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Dr. Dilip K Barua, Ph.D
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