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Updated Murphy's Law(s)

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Murphy's Laws

 

1.If anything can go wrong, it will.

 

2.If there is a possibility of several things going wrong, the one that will cause the most damage will be the first one to go wrong.

 

3.If anything just cannot go wrong, it will anyway.

 

4.If you perceive that there are four possible ways in which something can go wrong, and circumvent these, then a fifth way, unprepared for, will promptly develop.

 

5.Left to themselves, things tend to go from bad to worse.

 

6.If everything seems to be going well, you have obviously overlooked something.

 

7.Nature always sides with the hidden flaw.

 

8.Mother nature is a bitch.

 

 

HISTORY OF MURPHY'S LAWS

 

The following article was excerpted from The Desert Wings

March 3, 1978

by the AFFTC History Office

 

Murphy's Law ("If anything can go wrong, it will") was born here (Edwards Air Force Base) û in 1949 at North Base.

 

It was named after Capt. Edward A. Murphy, an engineer working on Air Force Project MX981, (a project) designed to see how much sudden deceleration a person can stand in a crash.

 

One day, after finding that a transducer was wired wrong, he cursed the technician responsible and said, "If there is any way to do it wrong, he'll find it."

 

The contractor's project manager kept a list of "laws" and added this one, which he called Murphy's Law.

 

Actually, what he did was take an old law that had been around for years in a more basic form (see first paragraph above) and give it a name.

 

Shortly afterwards, the Air Force doctor (Dr. John Paul Stapp) who rode a sled on the deceleration track to a stop, pulling 40 Gs, gave a press conference. He said that their good safety record on the project was due to a firm belief in Murphy's Law and in the necessity to try and circumvent it.

 

Aerospace manufacturers picked it up and used it widely in their ads during the next few months, and soon it was being quoted in many news and magazine articles. Murphy's Law was born.

 

The Northrop project manager, George E. Nichols, had a few laws of his own. Nichols' Fourth Law says, "Avoid any action with an unacceptable outcome."

 

The doctor, well-known Col. John P. Stapp, had a paradox: Stapp's Ironical Paradox, which says, "The universal aptitude for ineptitude makes any human accomplishment an incredible miracle."

 

Nichols is still around. At NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab in Pasadena, he's the quality control manager for the Viking project to send an unmanned spacecraft to Mars.

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