Kaj_Sotala comments on Best career models for doing research? - Less Wrong

27 Post author: Kaj_Sotala 07 December 2010 04:25PM

You are viewing a comment permalink. View the original post to see all comments and the full post content.

Comments (999)

You are viewing a single comment's thread. Show more comments above.

Comment author: Kaj_Sotala 07 December 2010 07:18:29PM 4 points [-]

once you have a doctorate and some publications, it probably won't be hard to persuade a professor to offer you an honorary (unpaid) position which gives you an institutional affiliation, library access, and maybe even a desk. Then you can go ahead with freelancing, without most of the disadvantages you cite.

Huh. That's a fascinating idea, one which had never occurred to me. I'll have to give this suggestion serious consideration.

Comment author: billswift 07 December 2010 09:45:23PM 7 points [-]

Ron Gross's The Independent Scholar's Handbook has lots of ideas like this. A lot of the details in it won't be too useful, since it is mostly about history and the humanities, but quite a bit will be. It is also a bit old to have some more recent stuff, since there was almost no internet in 1993.

Comment author: James_Miller 07 December 2010 10:40:55PM 3 points [-]

Or become a visiting professor in which you teach one or two courses a year in return for modest pay, affiliation and library access.