ChristianKl comments on How do you choose areas of scientific research? - Less Wrong Discussion
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Comments (22)
That's a very interesting essay indeed. Some thoughts:
I agree, but I'm reminded of the story of the mathematician on great generals. That's not necessarily the case here, but it is something to think about.
Indeed I'm reminded of Scott Alexander's comments on the Good Judgment Project and how although there is a correlation correct people aren't necessarily the smartest people.
Courage is a non-technical term which I hate. I think he means disagreeableness based on his wording which I'd agree that excessive agreeableness is probably more detrimental than excessive disagreeableness, but it seems like maximal disagreeableness would also be bad.
So less funding is better? (Yes, sentence fragment, get over it) That is an interesting idea. Most people, including a couple commenters on this post, would probably disagree with that. The drugmonkey blog spends many words complaining about funding issues. I'm wondering about possible confounds assuming this is a real phenomenon. Is it the lack of funding, the lack of respect, the isolation of having fewer researchers in one area (too many cooks problem)?
I'm not sure how someone could've figured this out. Maybe this is owing to my lack of experience; this is something you can only discover in your 50s or 60s after several decades of seeing people working on difficult problems. I'm not sure I trust this.
I strongly doubt this is true. If the majority of possibilities are wrong, then improving search algorithms should have a bigger payoff than increasing productivity although there is a proper balance that needs to be found.
Oh! That's why you said I should read this.
I'm way off-task, so I'll come back to this after I finish some work. It is a fascinating read though. Thank you.
Courage is an emotion. Emotions matter. Don't try to eliminate them for the equation just because you don't like them.