• Question: Which is better, a scientist or an engineer and why?

    Asked by anon-73912 on 23 Apr 2020.
    • Photo: Claire Brockett

      Claire Brockett answered on 23 Apr 2020:


      I don’t think either is better – both engineers and scientists can do important work and often we work together as a team.
      At the moment, in my job, I am working with a biologist, a physicist, two computer modellers, one surgeon, a podiatrist, a biomechanics scientist – as well as lots of other engineers. Everyone bringing important skills to a problem makes it much easier to solve.

      So both are equally as good 🙂

    • Photo: K-Jo O'Flynn

      K-Jo O'Flynn answered on 23 Apr 2020:


      Both are as good as eachother! It just depends if your more a paperwork person (scientist) or practical (engineer). Both help the world in incredible ways and help keep it moving.

    • Photo: Louise France

      Louise France answered on 23 Apr 2020:


      I think it is really hard to differentiate between a scientist and an engineer, other than by the qualifications they have. Both design, make and test things using experiments. Both contribute to society in a way that allows us to evolve and push the limits.

      Neither could exist without the other. It just depends what you are interested in 🙂

    • Photo: Stephen Lang

      Stephen Lang answered on 23 Apr 2020:


      As I am an engineer I want to say Engineer, but in reality neither is better than the other. It is a bit like a yacht. It has a sail and a hull, without the hull the sail just floats around unable to function, and without the sail, the yacht just floats around aimlessly. To move forward the two have to work together.

    • Photo: Diana Mathew

      Diana Mathew answered on 23 Apr 2020:


      Both professions are equally important. Sometimes it is a bit difficult to explain the difference between the two but i’ll it a go.
      Similarity – they both need good understanding of Science, Maths and Technology.
      Difference – Scientists usually are involved in observing and understanding how things work or evolve in nature. For e.g., an astrophysicist trying to understand the chemical composition of a distant star to explain its birth/death, a physicist trying to understand how sub-atomic particles interact. Engineers usually would make use of this scientific knowledge to create a new equipment/machine/process. For example, nuclear engineering is based on the science of nuclear fusion that happen in celestial bodies; Electronic Engineering is based on semiconductor physics.

    • Photo: Katie Sparks

      Katie Sparks answered on 23 Apr 2020:


      They can be very similar – you work as part of a team, you try things out and see how it goes, you write reports and give presentations on your findings, you have a set amount of time and money to do things in.

      That said, I like to think of science as “what is going on here?” and engineering as “how am I going to do that?”

    • Photo: Alistair McConnell

      Alistair McConnell answered on 23 Apr 2020:


      Why not be both? I work as a researcher in robotics which involves both being an engineer and being a scientist. There is some much cross over between the two so I would not say either is better or worse.

Comments