Participating in the Work of Creation
作者:
M. JIM PLATTS,
期刊:
European Journal of Engineering Education
(Taylor Available online 1998)
卷期:
Volume 23,
issue 2
页码: 163-169
ISSN:0304-3797
年代: 1998
DOI:10.1080/03043799808923495
出版商: Taylor & Francis Group
数据来源: Taylor
摘要:
The creation of modern civilization required a dual creativity. It required not only the creation of the artefacts but also the creation of the coordinated sensitivity and shared sense of responsibility to live and work together. It comes from what Weber called the Protestant work ethic, which McClelland called the achievement motive, led by what Maslow called inner-oriented people. The intertwining of technical and moral creative skills has its origins in the training of the masons who built the cathedrals, sees its tightest focus in the people known as Quakers, who were at the heart of the industrial revolution, and continues today in the art and profession of civil engineering.
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