From http://duncan.hull.name/2010/03/17/hunkins-hypothesis/


Cartoonist and engineer Tim Hunkin is probably best known for his exhibits at the Science Museum in London and his Under The Pier Show “a mad arcade of home-made slot machines & simulator rides on Southwold Pier, Suffolk”. His website is a treasure trove of weird and wonderful things.

Tim has an interesting proposition, let’s call in Hunkin’s Hypothesis [1], that technology is what makes us human:

“Technology isn’t just something outside ourselves, it’s an innate part of human nature, like sex, sleeping or eating, and that its been a major driving force in evolution. Tool using, along with language and bipedalism, is essentially what makes us human. The complicated theories used to explain why we first stood up are largely unnecessary. Our hands simply became too useful for holding tools to waste them on walking.”

He bases this idea, on a paper published by Frances Evans [2] about the creative engineering mind. This idea has at least two important implications

  • Engineering is a creative and intellectual process that humans do instinctively, not a dying skill practiced by dinosaurs
  • Engineering is an essential part of education, that needs to be taught more in schools and universities. Tim encourages his grand-children to use spot-welders, glue-guns and soldering irons at every opportunity! Health and safety regulations, plus the fear of being sued make this tricky.

I’m not sure what to make of Hunkin’s Hypothesis yet, but it’s an intriguing idea.

References

  1. Tim Hunkin (2006). Technology is what makes us human. timhunkin.com
  2. Frances Evans (1998). Two legs, thing using and talking: The origins of the creative engineering mind AI & Society, 12 (3), 185-213 DOI:10.1007/BF01206195
  3. Tim Hunkin – The Seaside Inventor, Southwold Pier, Suffolk
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