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On the night of January 27th, 1986, a group of engineers in Utah tried to stop the Challenger launch. They had the data. They had a documented history of a known design flaw. They had a teleconference with NASA that lasted hours.
They did not stop the launch.
This episode is about a harder problem than suppressed dissent: what happens when the dissent is present, documented, voiced, on the record, and institutionally weightless. It covers the O-ring warnings that went back a full year before the disaster, the night-before teleconference and what happened when Morton Thiokol engineers were removed from the room, Richard Feynman's minority report on the Rogers Commission, and the sociologist who spent years in the National Archives and came back with a finding that changed the story.
Episode 2 of The Tenth Man, a podcast about the specific mechanisms different domains have built to make dissent structurally impossible to ignore.
Show Notes:
The "take off your engineering hat" exchange is documented in Rogers Commission testimony by both Kilminster and Boisjoly and is cited across multiple independent sources. It can be stated as fact. The Feynman risk estimate discrepancy (1-in-100,000 vs. engineer estimates of 1-in-50 to 1-in-100) is documented in Appendix F of the Rogers Commission Report and is primary source material.
Vaughan's normalization of deviance thesis is academic and interpretive - it is the most persuasive scholarly account of the organizational failure, but it represents a revision of the Rogers Commission's more blame-focused framing. The episode presents it as such, not as settled fact.
Sources Referenced:
www.tenthman.ai
By Chris PordonOn the night of January 27th, 1986, a group of engineers in Utah tried to stop the Challenger launch. They had the data. They had a documented history of a known design flaw. They had a teleconference with NASA that lasted hours.
They did not stop the launch.
This episode is about a harder problem than suppressed dissent: what happens when the dissent is present, documented, voiced, on the record, and institutionally weightless. It covers the O-ring warnings that went back a full year before the disaster, the night-before teleconference and what happened when Morton Thiokol engineers were removed from the room, Richard Feynman's minority report on the Rogers Commission, and the sociologist who spent years in the National Archives and came back with a finding that changed the story.
Episode 2 of The Tenth Man, a podcast about the specific mechanisms different domains have built to make dissent structurally impossible to ignore.
Show Notes:
The "take off your engineering hat" exchange is documented in Rogers Commission testimony by both Kilminster and Boisjoly and is cited across multiple independent sources. It can be stated as fact. The Feynman risk estimate discrepancy (1-in-100,000 vs. engineer estimates of 1-in-50 to 1-in-100) is documented in Appendix F of the Rogers Commission Report and is primary source material.
Vaughan's normalization of deviance thesis is academic and interpretive - it is the most persuasive scholarly account of the organizational failure, but it represents a revision of the Rogers Commission's more blame-focused framing. The episode presents it as such, not as settled fact.
Sources Referenced:
www.tenthman.ai