Engineering method: Difference between revisions

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|colspan="2"| These questions lead to a <em>justification</em>. They identify the cause of the problem or the result of experimentation, but more importantly it primes an explanation of why this is likely to be. In engineering this lays out a path to solve the problem, and in science it lays out a path for experimentation.
|colspan="2"| These questions lead to a <em>justification</em>. They identify the cause of the problem or the result of experimentation, but more importantly it primes an explanation of why this is likely to be. In engineering this lays out a path to solve the problem, and in science it lays out a path for experimentation.
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| <em><span style="color:green">Implementation</span></em>:<br>How can you implement a possible solution? || <em><span style="color:green">Experimentation</span></em>:<br>How can you conduct an empirical experiment?
| <em><span style="color:green">Implementation</span></em>:<br>How could one implement a possible solution? || <em><span style="color:green">Experimentation</span></em>:<br>How could one conduct an empirical experiment?
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|colspan="2"| Upon completion, these questions lead to a result. If this result matches the defined prediction and justification, we may end here. If not, we need to repeat this and the previous step, revising our model and <em>iterating</em>.
|colspan="2"| Upon completion, these questions lead to a result. If this result matches the defined prediction and justification, we may end here. If not, we need to repeat this and the previous step, revising our model and <em>iterating</em>.