Neil Armstrong Speech
Neil Armstrong Speech
Neil Armstrong Speech
Neil A. Armstrong
National Press Club
February 22, 2000
Fellow engineers, honored guests, ladies and gentlemen: It is National Engineers Week, and
I am honored to be speaking on behalf of the National Academy of Engineering and our nation's
professional engineering societies.
I am, and ever will be, a white-socks, pocket-protector, nerdy engineerborn under the
second law of thermodynamics, steeped in the steam tables, in love with free-body diagrams,
transformed by Laplace, and propelled by compressible flow.
As an engineer, I take a substantial amount of pride in the accomplishments of my
profession. Bill Wulf, president of the National Academy of Engineering, has said that science is
about what is, and engineering is about what can be. The Greek letter eta, in lower case, often
shows up in engineering documents. Engineers pay a good bit of attention to improving eta
because it is a symbol for efficiencydoing an equivalent or better job with less weight, less
power, less time, less cost. The entire existence of engineers is dedicated to doing things better
and more efficiently.
When knowledge, facts, or solutions are sought, there are a number of techniques available
from which to select. These techniques can be ranked according to their effectiveness, from the
most certain to the most uncertain. At the top, or level one, is measurement; but even excellent
measurements can be subject to small amounts of error. Level two is cause and effect. That's a
rigorous deduction based on the laws of nature; on the conservation of mass, energy, and
momentum; on Newtonian mechanics, Ohm's law, Charles's law, and all those kinds of
relationships. These techniques for solving problems are not error free, but they do provide
reliable and repeatable results.
At the third level I put correlation studies. These are statistical techniques which allow the
drawing of general and reasonable conclusions, but imprecise conclusions. An example of this is
when you hear a conclusion such as 62 percent of the people who eat pistachio ice cream 20 or
more times a week tend to gain weight.
The fourth level is opinion sampling. Conclusions here can be useful, but they are often
temperable and not repeatable. Levels five, six, seven, and eight include a variety of techniques
that vary from focus groups to intuition to dream analysis and just plain guessing.
Uncertainty increases with the number of independent variables. So engineers use
measurement and cause-and-effect methods for problem solving as much as possible, and use
correlation studies only when the number of independent variables is too great for explicit
solutions.
Engineering is a profession which leaves its imprint on our society in countless ways. We
all intuitively understand the term quality of life, but we have difficulty in attempting to define
it. Each individual has a unique group of factors which are important to him or her in quality of
life. One person might think having no obligation to work whatsoever would be ideal, while
another person would think having a great deal of work to do would be ideal. We do know that a
century ago the world really needed improvements in quality of lifehealth, mobility, living
standards.
At that time, life was a constant struggle. There were epidemics of tuberculosis. Child labor
and 12-hour work days were used to ensure economic output. The average life expectancy had
barely budged in a thousand years. If you reached senior citizen status you beat the odds; to
have all your children reach adulthood was rare. Waterborne diseases like typhoid fever and
cholera were scourges around the globe. Industries blanketed cities with soot. Streets were
filled with garbage and sewage. The world's forests were being decimated to fuel burgeoning
industries and to build and heat homes for the world's growing population.
The twentieth was a century often punctuated with the terror of war and darkened with
societal struggles to overcome injustice. But it was also the first century in which technology
enabled the tenets and the images of those traumas to reach across the world and touch people in
ways that were previously unimagined. John Pierce, the engineer who fathered Telstar, the first
satellite to relay television signals across the Atlantic, said that engineering helped create a world
in which no injustice could be hidden.
Engineers are dedicated to solving problems and creating new, useful, and efficient things.
So should not the world admire and respect them? Answer: Only occasionally. Many of our
fellow citizens are mistrustful of logic and critical of technocrats, and often with reason. Bridges
fail, airplanes crash, storage tanks leak, radiation escapes, and automobiles are recalled. Such
failures are reported widely, and the search for whom to blame is initiated. But there are a
couple of problems here. Engineers are not good communicators. We are mistrusted because we
are perceived as being slaves to technology, as technocrats who don't care a whit about the
environment or safety or human values. And I reject those criticisms. In my experience,
engineers aren't really bad folks. A little too focused, maybe too intense for some, but they are
as caring and concerned as other segments of our society. The fact that their failures are so
widely reported is evidence of their rarity.
Now, in this final year of the twentieth century, many will look back to see how we have
changed and what we have accomplished. By measuring our successes and our failures, they
will gauge the progress that we have made as individuals and as a society. The evolution of
popular culture, politics, and business has given us a world that is vastly different from that of
our grandparents, and engineering has played a significant role in those changes. So we decided
we would take a focused look at how engineering has affected the quality of life in this past
century.
Over the past year, a rather impressive consortium of professional engineering societies,
representing nearly every engineering discipline, has given its time, resources, and attention to a
nationwide effort to identify and communicate the ways that engineering has affected our lives.
Engineering is the second largest profession in the United States, behind teaching, and so a large
group of minds was looking at this issue.
Each organization independently polled its membership to find out what individual
engineers believed to be the greatest achievements in their respective fields. This effort covered
areas as diverse as agricultural engineering, chemical engineering, electrical and mechanical
engineering, aerospace engineering, and so on. Because these professional societies are
unrelated to each other, the American Association of Engineering Societies and the National
Academy of Engineering (NAE) provided the groundwork to coordinate the effort. The
Academy, in particular, took a leadership role in this effort because of its unique ability to
convene the world's greatest engineering minds under the congressional charter that it shares
with the National Academy of Sciences.
The NAE issued the call for nominations to the societies, convened a selection committee of
top engineers from all fields, and set about the laborious practice of qualifying and quantifying
the information in the nominations. I was pleased to be asked to serve on the selection
committee, which was chaired so capably by Guy Stever.
After several rounds of narrowing the nominations, the committee met for two full days
toward the end of last year and debated about just how to tackle this task and determine which
engineering achievements of the twentieth century had the greatest positive effect on mankind.
While intercontinental ballistic missiles and laser-guided bombs were undoubtedly technological
marvels with important and perhaps justifiable reasons for their existence, projects of this type
were somewhat disadvantaged on the quality-of-life basis.
Engineers should, and often do, present their projects, their ideas, and their conclusions with
both the strengths and the weaknesses in full view. And I feel an obligation to maintain that
tradition. A popular 14th century phrase was comparisons are odious, and perhaps they are.
Nevertheless, we are, in contemporary society, engulfed in comparisons and ratings and lists:
the top 25 teams, the top 10 money winners, the Oscars, the Emmys, the Grammys, the
bestsellers, etc. And we engineers, not to be left out, have developed our own list.
Such lists are, admittedly, somewhat self-serving. This one certainly is. In making
comparisons among engineering achievements, we could not use measurements, and we found it
difficult to use cause and effect or correlation studies. So we were obliged to reach way down to
level four, opinion sampling, to reach consensus. Although this was an uncomfortable process
for engineers, the NAE did aggregate a committee of exceptional breadth and experience,
considered seriously the recommendations of the nominatorsall well-informed and
experienced engineers in their respective fieldsand sifted.
Now, as we take a look at the things considered by the NAE, we will see that if any of them
were removed, our world would be a very different and less hospitable place. Each one of these
achievements has been important to the change in our society.
If you were to ask a person on the street to name a great engineering achievement, he or she
might say the Golden Gate Bridge, or the Panama Canal, or the Empire State Building. And
while each of those is a great engineering achievement, none of them made the list. What did
make the list were technologies that have become inextricable parts of the fabric of our lives
some spectacular, some nearly invisible, but all critically important. So, let me introduce you to
the list, the 20 engineering achievements that had the greatest positive impact on society in the
twentieth century.
At number 20 we have high-performance materials. Early in the century the first synthetic
resins were developed, and plastics have since become ubiquitous worldwide. In the second half
of the century, polymers, composites, and ceramic materials found extensive applications.
Number 19 is nuclear technology. Although controversial in the public mind, the
engineering achievements related to conflict deterrence, power generation, and medical
diagnostics and treatment remain among the most important of the twentieth century.
At number 18 are lasers and fiber optics. Lasers brought xerographic printers and bar code
readers, transformed survey methods, and revolutionized the storage of music, data, and images.
And when the laser was combined with optical fiber, the rate of information flow was
dramatically increased. Tonight, three engineers who were key players in the development of
optical fiber will receive the NAEs Charles Stark Draper Prize.
The second ranked engineering contribution is the automobile. It too was a nineteenth
century invention, but its development in the twentieth century demanded that it be considered a
competitor. Passenger cars and trucks are the major transporter of people and cargo around the
world, and the automobile has expanded the ease, practicality, and affordability of short- to
medium-range travel enormously.
Now, at this point, if we were in the entertainment world, we would have drum rolls,
fanfares, and rockets. But as engineers we are not so inclinedwell, maybe a few rockets. The
winner, the top-rated engineering improvement to the life of earthlings in this century was
electrification. The majority of the top 20 achievements would not have been possible without
electricity. Electrification changed the country's economic development and gave rural
populations the same opportunities and amenities as people in the cities. It provides the power
for small appliances in the home, for computers in control rooms that route power and
telecommunications, and for the machinery that produces capital goods and consumer products.
If anything shines as an example of how engineering has changed the world during the twentieth
century, it is clearly the power that we use in our homes and businesses.
So, there you have it, the top 20. My descriptions have been sometimes trite, and it's likely
that I missed some of the most important societal contributions from the nominees. And, without
question, I did not even mention the work from those nominations that did not make the top 20
list, yet in many cases were of enormous importance to certain sectors of society or certain parts
of the world. And in all honestly, I am guilty of a bit of subterfuge. Certainly the nominations
were worthy and the committee was honest and diligent in evaluating them. And certainly you
have been given their well-reasoned conclusions. The subterfuge is that my purpose was not to
promote the competitive nature of the event, or to congratulate the winner, or to convince you
that electrification was the most important technical activity of this past century. All of you have
your own opinions on the importance of various technical developments to our society. What I
really hoped to do was shamelessly use this occasion to remind you of the breadth, and the depth,
and the importance of engineering as a whole to human existence, human progress, and human
happiness.
There are perhaps, even more far-reaching consequences of this exercise. The likelihood of
today marking the end of creative engineering is nil. The future is a bit foggy, but it's not
unreasonable to suggest that the twenty-first century will enjoy a rate of progress not unlike the
twentieth. And a century hence, 2000 may be viewed as quite a primitive period in human
history. It's something to hope for.
For three decades I have enjoyed the work and friendship of Arthur Clarke, a prolific
science and science fiction writer, who back in 1945 first suggested the possibility of the
communications satellite. In addition to writing some wonderful books, he has also proposed a
few memorable laws. Clarke's third law seems particularly apt today: Any sufficiently
developed technology is indistinguishable from magic.
Truly, it has been a magical century.