Mostly not - but then I am a human full of cognitive biases. Has anyone else in the field paid them any attention? Do they have any third-party notice at all? We're talking here about somewhere north of a million words of closely-reasoned philosophy with direct relevance to that field's big questions, for example. It's quite plausible that it could be good and have no notice, because there's not that much attention to go around; but if you want me to assume it's as good as it would be with decent third-party tyre-kicking, I think I can reasonably ask for more than "the guy that wrote it and the people working at the institute he founded agree, and hey, do they look good to you?" That's really not much of an argument in favour.
Put it this way: I'd be foolish to accept cryptography with that little outside testing as good, here you're talking about operating system software for the human mind. It needs more than "the guy who wrote it and the people who work for him think it's good" for me to assume that.
Fair enough. It is slightly more than Vaniver has going in their favour, to return to my attempt to balance their rationality against each other.
Ideally, I'd like to save the world. One way to do that involves contributing academic research, which raises the question of what's the most effective way of doing that.
The traditional wisdom says if you want to do research, you should get a job in a university. But for the most part the system seems to be set up so that you first spend a long time working for someone else and research their ideas, after which you can lead your own group, but then most of your time will be spent on applying for grants and other administrative trivia rather than actually researching the interesting stuff. Also, in Finland at least, all professors need to also spend time doing teaching, so that's another time sink.
I suspect I would have more time to actually dedicate on research, and I could get doing it quicker, if I took a part-time job and did the research in my spare time. E.g. the recommended rates for a freelance journalist in Finland would allow me to spend a week each month doing work and three weeks doing research, of course assuming that I can pull off the freelance journalism part.
What (dis)advantages does this have compared to the traditional model?
Some advantages:
Some disadvantages:
EDIT: Note that while I certainly do appreciate comments specific to my situation, I posted this over at LW and not Discussion because I was hoping the discussion would also be useful for others who might be considering an academic path. So feel free to also provide commentary that's US-specific, say.