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Inviting Disaster: Lessons From the Edge of Technology by James R. Chiles
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Inviting Disaster: Lessons From the Edge of Technology

by James R. Chiles

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105258,559 (3.64)3
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Collins Business (2002), Paperback, 368 pages

Member:owen1218
Collections:Your libraryRating:***1/2
Tags:technology, disasters, technological disasters, engineering, safety, systems failure
Recently added bysiai, private library, jorgecardoso, Namahn, safelykept44689, mjatromp, tymfos
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Excellent
  jaygheiser | Jul 23, 2008 |
An excellent book, combining new theories on how disasters happen with compelling details of illustrative disasters. ( )
  furdog | Feb 10, 2007 |
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Book description

Amazon.com Amazon.com's Best of 2001 (ISBN 0066620821, Paperback)

Inviting Disaster, by technology and history writer James R. Chiles, is an unusual book: it appeals to the macabre desires that keep us riveted to highway accidents, while knowledgeably discoursing on the often preventable mistakes that caused them. At its heart are colorful stories behind more than 50 of the most infamous catastrophes that periodically chilled the advance of the industrial age. There are both those well remembered (the 1986 Challenger explosion, for example) and those now largely forgotten (a 1937 gas explosion at a Texas school that killed 298). But along with lively depictions of these deadly devastations and white-knuckle calamities--the U.S. battleship Maine, Apollo 13, and Three Mile Island among them--Chiles offers an informed analysis of the unfortunate chain of events that brought them about. And by grouping like incidents to show how fatal "system fractures" eventually developed through a combination of human error and mechanical malfunction, he also suggests how we might sidestep such tragedies in the future. In so, doing he fashions these spectacular accounts of failed planes, trains, ships, bridges, dams, factories, and other conveyances and facilities into a cautionary tale about technological progress. --Howard Rothman

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:18 -0400)

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