CronoDAS comments on Scientist vs. philosopher on conceptual analysis - Less Wrong
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"Yes, but when I discovered it, it stayed discovered." - Lawrence Shepp
Indeed, there's a reason for the line "publish or perish". Popularization is important, not just for the publisher but for the world. But in addition to telling people what they have discovered, a scientist can also explain how it was discovered. Credit assignment, within a mind or between minds, is a hard problem, whose solution usually involves increased performance.
My objection with Crick isn't that he didn't get the message out about DNA's double helix structure quite successfully, nor that he didn't illustrate a method for advancing one's scientific career, but that with this quote, his own report of his supposed contribution and methods gives misleading evidence about what actually makes a research program go faster or better. The credibility flows from his presumptive causal role in a revolution in biology based on his fame. In contrast, the best content I know on the subject of learning how to do good research, representing the condensation of enormous volumes of evidence, is an old chestnut:
In that talk, Hamming spends some words on the question of conceptual analysis: