The Origin of Murphy's Law 240
LauraW writes "HotAIR, the web site of the Annals of Improbable Research , is publishing a fascinating series on the Origin of Murphy's Law. It turns out there really was a Murphy, and the story of his law involves rocket sleds, Chuck Yeager, and Edwards Air Force Base. The article covers all these topics and more, and includes interviews with Yeager, the son of Murphy (really), and several surviving members of the project that inspired the law."
As my uncle used to say... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:As my uncle used to say... (Score:2, Insightful)
An optomist can never be pleasantly surprised.
Murphy was an optimist. (Score:3, Insightful)
If it's flaws you're hiding,
That's where nature's siding.
Re:As my uncle used to say... (Score:3, Funny)
My favorite variation is:
"Nature sides with the hidden flaw."
Re:As my uncle used to say... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:As my uncle used to say... (Score:3, Funny)
NO CARRIER
Re:As my uncle used to say... (Score:2)
Murphy's Law... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Murphy's Law... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Murphy's Law... (Score:5, Funny)
Sod's his first name. 'Off' is his last.
I've heard of him :)
Obligatory Blackadder Quote (Score:5, Funny)
Baldrick: "I'm not sure."
Blackadder: "Come on, you MUST have a first name."
Baldrick: "It might be Sod Off."
Blackadder: "Sod Off??"
Baldrick: "Yeah, when I was a young lad playing in the gutter, I used to say to all the other snipes, "Hello, my names Baldrick". And they'd say, "Yes we know, Sod Off Baldrick"
Re:Murphy's Law... (Score:3, Funny)
Yes, but most people use the name "Blair" for him.
The surviving members spawned the law? (Score:2)
More elegant? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:More elegant? (Score:5, Insightful)
Murphy was an Engineer. His original formulation "'if there is any way to do it wrong, he will", has some value in ergonomic design. Controls should be designed so as to eliminate chance accidents. For instance, in computers, most connectors are shaped, or keyed, so as to reduce the chances of someone plugging in wires the wrong way.
Some accidents are avoidable. Some are not. The adage "Shit Happens", while perhaps emotionally comforting, may lead some to confuse an entirely avoidable situation with the truly unpredictable.
Re:More elegant? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:More elegant? (Score:3, Insightful)
Personally,I look forward to connectors that can be plugged in despite low lighting and cramped conditions, purely by feel, without risking pins on a cable, that by some fiat (FCC?), is non-replaceable.
Like the IDE cables? (Score:3, Interesting)
But the site is Slashdotted, right? (Score:4, Funny)
Thereby proving the law!
Shameless TV Quote (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Shameless TV Quote (Score:5, Insightful)
I've noticed that, in terms of direct consequences, there isn't much difference between the actions of deliberately evil people and the hopelessly oblivious and ignorant.
Most of the people cutting you off on the freeway belong to the latter category, as much as we tend to think of them in the former.
Re:Shameless TV Quote (Score:3, Informative)
One of my favorites.... (Score:5, Funny)
If computers get too powerful, we can organize them into a committee -- that will do them in.
Re:One of my favorites.... (Score:5, Funny)
But wouldn't that make them a Beowulf cluster?
Re:One of my favorites.... (Score:2)
But wouldn't that make them a Beowulf cluster?
a Beowulf cluster of beaurocrats! (Score:2)
And one of mine... (Score:3, Funny)
It's true! (Score:5, Interesting)
So there you have it. Truth according to the Internet. :)
It must be true! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:It must be true! (Score:2, Funny)
Twice! [slashdot.org]
--
Re:It's true! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:It's true! (Score:2, Funny)
Eddie Murphy?? (Score:2)
That would explain brutha numsei in the golden child, i reckon.. Didn't know he was in the air force. Perhaps he invented flubber and robin william's is just covering for him..
Re:It's true! (Score:3, Funny)
Well at least one person [astro.it] disputes it:
I.V.
another murphy's law (Score:5, Funny)
Old News (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Old News (Score:4, Insightful)
If you'd actually read the article, you'd see that the writers covers the story in the preface of the book and researches it in much greater detail. Apparently everyone involved at the time has their own version of the story, and some of them have rather strong feelings about it. It's really an interesting read. it's too bad the link is posted before all 4 parts of the article are finished.
Part 4 link (Score:3, Informative)
Slashdot's Law. (Score:4, Funny)
"Anytime a camera is present, someone will stretch open their bottom."
Evolution of Murphy's Law (Score:5, Insightful)
The victims of Murphy's Law then turned around and said "if the system can go wrong, it will", which was around the same period we invented the notion of "computer error".
Finally, Murphy's Law made the leap to non-technological domains, "if something can break, it will, in the worst possible way".
So Murphy's Law today delegates responsibility for our fuck-ups to the hostile hand of fate, whereas Murphy's original comment was all about our own responsibility for making systems that actually work.
Re:not so sure (Score:2)
A program, for example, should be able to handle every possible strange situation or user input that can be thrown at it, even the ones the programmer would never have expected, and at least be able to generate an error and stop executing rather than exh
IIRC (Score:3, Insightful)
For example, PS2 connections for keyboards and mice are keyed to prevent being plugged in the wrong way.
GUI developers (especially KDE and GNOME developers!!!) should take notes on things like this.
Re:IIRC (Score:2, Insightful)
For the first little while ps/2 connections became popular in the compat-world, I was a lowly it tech and saw many a motherboard where someone simply plugged the mouse into the keyboard socket and vice-versa. Blew out most keyboard bioses back in those days. Pretty damn stupid. Sure, key it...but make one an AT connection (keyboard) and one a ps/2. Yeesh. Not really idiot-proof ot
Re:IIRC (Score:3, Insightful)
Better still, design it so that either device would work in either port. Similar to the USB or firewire ports - it doesn't matter which USB port you plug the keyboard into and which the mouse, either will work.
Cheers,
Ian
Re:IIRC (Score:2)
If my memory serves me right, this is the way at least some of the original PS/2s worked. This was the case at least on the lowly Model 25.
Re:IIRC (Score:2)
Umm, no they aren't. At least not on any of my keyboards, mice, or motherboards.
They *should* be, cause it'd save an awfully large amount of annoyance...
Re:IIRC (Score:2)
Re:IIRC (Score:2)
Mirror (Score:5, Informative)
Post your corallaries here. (Score:2)
My first corollary: Murphy's Law of Packaging (Score:5, Funny)
up ^
Then, to make things doubly clear, put another identifier near the bottom, with its own arrow:
dn v
That way, with up saying up, and dn for down, the UPS (pronounced oops) guys can't get it wrong.
Re:My first corollary: Murphy's Law of Packaging (Score:5, Insightful)
Just karma whoring (Score:4, Informative)
Murphy's Law [murphys-laws.com]
If I remember correctly, there is even a picture of the guy in question, and some pretty funny story to in the "Origin of Murphy's Law" section...
Reverse Murphy's Law (Score:5, Interesting)
"Things never go as bad as they could have."
A teacher one introduced me to it for fun, but I think it holds.
Re:Reverse Murphy's Law (Score:2)
I believe that Murphy's law happened to Murphy's law, since almost EVERYONE interprets it wrong. Check your local jargon file.
Re:Reverse Murphy's Law (Score:2)
Re:Reverse Murphy's Law (Score:2)
Bah! (Score:5, Funny)
Article: (Part 4 is not up on the page yet) (Score:5, Informative)
Whatever you might think about Murphy's Law, one thing is certain: it is as ubiquitous an expression as there is in American English. Over the years it has been cited in thousands of articles, websites and news reports, been the subject of several books, appeared as the title of at least one bad Charles Bronson movie and a TV show, and inspired about a dozen zillion corollary Laws. Just about every time something goes wrong somewhere, the Law gets its two cents in. Fortunately my expertise owes very little to actual adversity -- I'm not writing this from a hospital bed -- and almost everything to research. Historical research. Which is to say I have become the expert on the origins of Murphy's Law. This happened by accident...and if I'd known what the consequences would be of sticking my nose into it -- how I'd draw the wrath of Chuck Yeager, get caught in the middle of a nasty 20-year feud, and nearly wind up in a hospital bed -- I probably wouldn't have bothered.
The Road to Murphy's Law
This all began a few months ago, after I showed an article I'd written for an aviation history magazine to my neighbor. The article concerned some goings on at Edwards, the famed Air Force flight test facility, in the 1950's. "You know," my neighbor said, "You'd probably be real interested in talking to my father, David Hill Sr. He worked at Edwards, on a bunch of rocket sled tests in the 1940's. In fact," he continued proudly, "he knew Murphy."
"Murphy?" I inquired, searching my memory for a test pilot of the same name. Yeager, Crossfield, Armstrong... It didn't ring a bell.
"You know, Murphy," he went on. "The guy who invented Murphy's Law."
I didn't say it, but I was absolutely skeptical. Who wouldn't be? One might as well claim to be friends with Kilroy, know the identity of Deepthroat, or the whereabouts of Amelia Earhart. The notion seemed outright laughable. Your father knew Murphy? Sure he did! If Murphy wasn't some imaginary Irish folk hero, then he was probably a gentle sage who drank a lot of Guinness and lived back in the 1700's. Needless to say I let the subject slide.
But a day or two later, I almost tripped over a slender book called Murphy's Law and Other Reasons Why Things Go Wrong that had been left on my doorstep. The book cited Murphy's Law and then listed literally hundreds of amusing corollaries. The extremely brief forward to the volume included a letter written by an engineer named George Nichols. And this is where things got interesting. Nichols said he'd worked on a series of rocket sled tests at Edwards in the 1940's with a Colonel John Paul Stapp and that Murphy's Law emerged from these tests.
"The Law's namesake," Nichols wrote, "was Capt. Ed Murphy Jr., a development engineer... Frustrated with a strap transducer which was malfunctioning due to an error in wiring the strain gauge bridges caused him to remark -- 'if there is any way to do it wrong, he will' -- referring to the technician who had wired the bridges. I assigned Murphy's Law to the statement and the associated variations..."
That appeared straightforward enough, and piqued my interest. I subsequently did some research and I discovered to my surprise that the story of the origin of Murphy's Law was not something generally agreed upon. Accounts in fact varied wildly. Some sources gave the credit solely to Ed Murphy Jr., a man they praised for his wisdom, insight, and panache, but said almost nothing about. In other places, Nichols' letter appeared -- often word for word -- explaining how he had come up with "the statement." And at least a few writers suggested that Co
Re:Article: (Part 4 is not up on the page yet) (Score:2)
He's the guy who runs Sealab, right?
His law is derived from the fact that even the slightest mistake will cause Pod 6, if not the entirety of Sealab, to explode.
Part 4 _is_ there.... (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.improb.com/airchives/paperair/volume9/
Enjoy!
This is news? Besides he's quoting the wrong Law! (Score:4, Informative)
If there are two or more ways to do something, and one of those ways can result in a catastrophe, then someone will do it.
The FOLDOC entry (from the Hacker's Lexicon I believe) also mentions the rocket sled thing....
Re:This is news? Besides he's quoting the wrong La (Score:4, Informative)
See the jargon file (Score:3, Informative)
Jargon (Score:2, Funny)
That's ok, you go read it guys. I'll just sit back sipping my ISO standard cup of tea [astrian.net] and enjoying some ANSI standard pizza [astrian.net].
Be sure to submit a story when you find out why it's called El Camino Bignum.
Timing is of the essence (Score:3, Funny)
I've always thought that "Murphy's law" was not precise enough. There's this addition that is needed to make it really work.
:D
Murphy's law revised:
"If anything can go wrong, it will. At the worst possible moment."
Try that one on for size. Proof? Two examples.
When a wing on an aircraft fails, not too many people will notice, unless the aircraft is flying.
You don't mind getting butter on your suit too badly, except when it's your new suit, that you just bought yesterday for this really important job-interview you're due for in about an hour.
I could go on for hours.
Murphy's law and Meyer Brigg's (Score:3, Interesting)
J is for judgemental; it is the 50% of people who like to be well organized and plan things in advance.
Murphy's law basically says that you should always do more preparations and planning to be better prepared; it thus rings very well with this group.
The other half of the population are much more interested in living in the present, for them the idea of always doing more preparations and planning for the future is not so appealing at all.
Tor
Prior art (Score:5, Interesting)
The mead must have tasted well enough for him to return to the bar with a built-to-order pint with two opposite handles. Sure enough the waitress returns the full pint to the emperor holding the pint with both hands by both handles.
Third time's a charm, the emperor must have thought as het returned to the bar, this time with a pint having three handles. Unimpressed the waitress returns the full pint holding it by two handles with the third handle pointing towards her chest.
Moral: idiot-proof design is difficult, and requires many iterations.
Two comments on idiot-proof design: (Score:3, Insightful)
first, the reason nothing can be made truly idiot-proof is that no rational human being can guess all of the variations that an idiot is going to somehow come up with. And the idiot in question isn't going to be coherent enough to tell you, either. (No matter how well it's designed, there are always going to be those individuals who could be left in a padded room with two steel ball bearings- and in ten minutes, will have lost one and broken the other... and they're going to want to use your design, too)
Re:Two comments on idiot-proof design: (Score:3, Funny)
So... (Score:3, Funny)
Another version... (Score:2)
Does anyone know the validity of this version?
Strangedog's Law (Score:4, Informative)
Part 4 [improb.com] early for your viewing pleasure.
SD
RTFA: (Score:2)
For every poster who wrote "I've heard this before!" read the article and you will see that the author compares the different versions of the origin.
p.s. congrats on slashdotting improb.com. They run the Ignoble prizes, and publish "The Annals of Improbable Research" A great blend of science and humo[u]r.
mks
The Linux Connection (Score:2)
The problem with traditional methods of testing is that these worst cases -- the outlier condition, the far-fetched and novel usage -- are not even considered let alone tested. You can make default conditions for wildcard input, but cannot test for what you cannot conceive. So Murphy's Law is actuall
The law about Murphy's law (Score:2)
NEWS FLASH: Murphy's Law Wasn't Written By Murphy (Score:2)
Corollary Laws (Score:2)
-- Where there's a right, there's a wrong.
-- A fool and your money are soon partners.
Murphy's corollary to Moore's Law (Score:2)
The other line *does* move faster (Score:2)
Murphy's Law is all about perception.
It was required by Murphy (Score:2)
Sexual Intellectuals..... (Score:2)
I have to admit no, I'm not familiar with the term. Sexual what?
"Sexual intellectuals. They're fucking know-it-alls, that's what."
i shot my Dr. Pepper out my nose reading that.
every - and i do mean EVERY single person i've met that's ever seen or dealt with Chuck Yeager (given General for the hell of it) has used the word "asshole" to describe him.
(i'm former AF officer and have dealt with enough g
Who wouldn't? (Score:2)
My question is, what self-respecting Slashdot reading nerd here wouldn't already know the story about Murphy's Law?
Just wondering --since I think it's stuff that matters
Murphy's Law = Crutch (Score:5, Interesting)
About 15 years ago a computer systems professional wrote an article which was published in Network World magazine that discussed Murphy's Law. The basic premise was that Murphy's Law was a crutch used by incompetants to justify they're lack of planning. The ideas expressed by Murphy should be a warning to all to prepare for the worst you can imagine so your not caught by the small shortcomings; however, they are all too often used to justify the failure of someone to plan. A disaster does not have to be a catastrophe if proper planning is done.
I'm providing the text of the article below. It is used by permission of the author.
Brandt's Laws
It was 1959. I was sixteen years old and had just accepted a job with a small electronics firm. I was employed there but a few days when I learned of Murphy's Law. I had previously learned of Charles' and Boyle's laws and the law of gravity. I instinctively knew if they called it a law, Murphy was right. After all, the other laws I had learned were valid.
I spent four years in electronics and moved to Data Processing after college. From what people said, Murphy seemed to be alive and well in the computer industry too. Something bothered me from time to time. People who had not been prudent used Murphy to avoid facing up to their failures. After all, if something was going to happen no matter what you did, how could you be held responsible for it? Carelessness crept in when Murphy could be blamed.
In the early eighties, I was introduced to men like Ken Copeland, Phil Crosby, Edward Demming and Ken Hagin. They all teach that we are responsible for our actions and we control our futures.
It took time but their message finally started to sink in. If I was prudent, I could control many of the things I had considered beyond my control. If I didn't accept unfavorable results as inevitable, they were not. Slowly, I formulated what is nearly the antithesis of Murphy's law. Although I didn't invent these laws, since I recorded them I don't blanch at calling them Brandt's Laws. Like anyone who is ahead of his peers, I've even been criticized for them. The following are several of the basic ones.
Too often, things happen and we simply write them off as inevitable. All too frequently, these are the result of a lack of prudence, fueled by carelessness caused by Murphy's laws.
I have never seen a well-planned fiasco.
By carefully studying the situation and engaging in good contingency planning, your survival is assured.
Lack of academic preparation and carelessness in on-going study frequently cause failures. I've seen many so-called professionals who don't study enough to keep up with even a minimum of available knowledge. Many work harder at their hobbies than their professions. These are not professionals but overpaid day laborers.
So frequently a band-aid is used to treat a severed artery, assuming or hoping it will heal if ignored. This is not to say that there frequently isn't a "simple" fix, but it should correct the problem and not create future problems. A quick fix targets symptoms, not the cause.
If, on the surface a problem has one obvious cause, there are several others and the most significant is not the obvious. The most obvious cause is frequently the one attacked, often at the expense of ignoring the real cause.
Brandt's Laws = Corrolaries to Murphy's Law (Score:3, Insightful)
Nature doesn't "go wrong". An asteroid hitting the Earth and wiping out life may seem like a fine example of Murphy's Law, but only
Best part (Score:2)
I have to admit no, I'm not familiar with the term. Sexual what? "Sexual intellectuals. They're fucking know-it-alls, that's what."
That destroys the credibility of the piece for me. I swear I've seen stuff on TV where Chuck himself admits to having cracked ribs. But as he would point out, that's just the way I remember it.
Re:Who was Sod then? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Who was Sod then? (Score:5, Funny)
2. A pitiable person. E.g."He's just had his car stolen and his wife has just run off with the milkman, the poor sod." This use is also be found with the expressions 'poor bastard' and 'poor bugger'.
* Abb. of the word sodomite.
Re:Who was Sod then? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Who was Sod then? (Score:2)
Re:Who was Sod then? (Score:2)
Wrong. From Dictionary.com [reference.com]:
Re:Who was Sod then? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Murphy's law is recursive (Score:2, Interesting)
If you wash your car to make it rain, it will not rain, even though it normally rains right after you wash your car.
Re:If it were a national government... (Score:2)
All of them ? [gwbush.com]
Re:If it were a national government... (Score:3, Interesting)
Bureaucracy.
It takes the longest amount of time to do anything, spends the most amount of time to do it, and still doesn't accomplish what it set out to do.
Re:If it were a national government... (Score:2)
The user, the king, is essentially chosen by chance. Once in, he can't be dismissed. And, if he chooses, he may ignore his training and education, often to the detriment of the people.
And then... (Score:2)
a geek would come and rm -r the bastard luser...
Re:And then... (Score:2)
Murphy's law was inspired by a ill-trained, if not diim, technician who was assigned to assist in these experiments. The careful plans of the engineers were screwed up by a less than competent man. In a very broad sense, the assignation of this dimwitted technician could be compared to the coronation of a idiot king. Add in the various mores against regicide, and you've got yourself an absolute disaster.
But Murphy's Law is more t
Re:I disagree with Murphy's Law (Score:2, Offtopic)
This is Moore's law.
Actually, he said transistor density will double every 18 months. Not quite the same thing.
BTW, computer power could continue doubling every X amount of time for quite a while - once parallelism is exploited more fully.
Re:If Murphy was right (Score:4, Funny)