"Engineers like to solve problems. If there are no problems handily available, they will create their own problems"
About this Quote
As a cartoonist, Adams is working in a familiar office-comedy register where competence becomes its own vice. The joke relies on a modern workplace truth: “problem-solving” is the highest-status form of labor, so the incentive is to keep problems in circulation. If you’re the person who fixes things, a smoothly running system threatens your relevance. Creating problems can mean overengineering, endless refactors, gold-plating, or optimizations no user asked for - the technical equivalent of rearranging furniture to prove you’re still employed.
The subtext is less about engineers as individuals than about a culture that rewards measurable struggle over quiet stability. We celebrate the heroic sprint, the late-night patch, the clever workaround. We rarely applaud the boring architecture that prevents the fire in the first place. Adams’s cynicism works because it mirrors how institutions turn admirable traits into perverse incentives: curiosity becomes nitpicking, rigor becomes rigidity, ambition becomes churn.
It’s also a gentle reminder that “smart” isn’t synonymous with “wise.” The impulse to solve is powerful; the harder skill is deciding which problems deserve to exist at all.
Quote Details
| Topic | Engineer |
|---|---|
| Source | Evidence: Engineers like to solve problems. If there are no problems handily available, they will create their own problems. (Chapter: "Engineers, scientists, programmers, and other odd people" (page number not verified from primary scan in this search)). The quote appears as part of a longer passage attributed to Scott Adams’s book The Dilbert Principle, credited on this Fermilab (fnal.gov) page as: "Scott Adams, The Dilbert Principle, United Features Syndicate, Inc., 1996." This strongly supports the primary-source origin being the 1996 book (not a later quote-collection site). However, I could not verify the exact page number from a viewable first-edition scan within this search session; the best specific locator I can provide here is the chapter title listed in library catalogs: "Engineers, scientists, programmers, and other odd people." Other candidates (1) MORE POWERFUL QUOTATIONS FOR SCIENTISTS AND ENGINEERS (Matthew N.O. Sadiku, Janet O. Sadiku, 2024) compilation95.0% ... Engineers like to solve problems. If there are no problems handily available, they will create their own problems... |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Adams, Scott. (2026, February 8). Engineers like to solve problems. If there are no problems handily available, they will create their own problems. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/engineers-like-to-solve-problems-if-there-are-no-15400/
Chicago Style
Adams, Scott. "Engineers like to solve problems. If there are no problems handily available, they will create their own problems." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/engineers-like-to-solve-problems-if-there-are-no-15400/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Engineers like to solve problems. If there are no problems handily available, they will create their own problems." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/engineers-like-to-solve-problems-if-there-are-no-15400/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.






