(First time poster, hope this works. Will also be posting to complexityblog as well.)
Some papers result from taking two papers and combining them. Perhaps nobody else had read both of them so you can say something new! Or (looking over this post) it may guide people to two really good papers, or in this case two really good posts.
This blog will draw from two excellent blog posts.
Scott Aaronson blogged on his website on Aug 2, 2021 about blankfaces, people who let stupid or undefined rules dictate what you can do without apology (see his post for a better explanation). One example that struck me I quote
No, I never applied for that grant. I spend two hours struggling to log in to a web portal designed by the world's top blankfaces until I finally gave up in despair.
Scott Alexander blogged on Less Wrong on Nov 26, 2018 about Is science slowing down? which answers with an emphatic yes. His point is science-per-researcher is much less than it used to be, and he has graphs and stats to prove it (see his post for the evidence and some speculation as to why this is) One of the reasons he gave struck me which I quote
Certain features of the modern academic system like undepaid PhD's, interminably long postdocs, endless grant writing drudgery, and clueless funders have lowered productivity. The 1930's academic system was ineed 25x more effective at getting researchers to actually do good research.
Scott Alexander later downplays this reason, though I think there is still something to it.
(I note that he gives other reasons as well, most notably for our field that the low hanging fruit is gone. Our lack of progress on P vs NP is likely that its a hard problem, rather than the reason above. Of course, if its solved tomorrow by an outsider without funding, I will happily be proven wrong.)
Scott Alexander hits upon two types of blankfaces (without using the term).
Grant writing drudgery: the rules for how to submit get more and more detailed an onerous. This is what Scott Aaronson was alluding to. There are other ways its drudgery as well.
Clueless Funders: the people deciding who gets funded might not know the area (actually in my experience the grant I've reviews have been quite good and the problem is more not enough money to award all that are deserving.)
SO I pose the following non-rhetorically as always
1) How big a factor is the slowing down of science that blankfaces get in the way?
(First time poster, hope this works. Will also be posting to complexityblog as well.)
Some papers result from taking two papers and combining them. Perhaps nobody else had read both of them so you can say something new! Or (looking over this post) it may guide people to two really good papers, or in this case two really good posts.
This blog will draw from two excellent blog posts.
Scott Aaronson blogged on his website on Aug 2, 2021 about blankfaces, people who let stupid or undefined rules dictate what you can do without apology (see his post for a better explanation). One example that struck me I quote
No, I never applied for that grant. I spend two hours struggling to log in to a web portal designed by the world's top blankfaces until I finally gave up in despair.
Scott Alexander blogged on Less Wrong on Nov 26, 2018 about Is science slowing down? which answers with an emphatic yes. His point is science-per-researcher is much less than it used to be, and he has graphs and stats to prove it (see his post for the evidence and some speculation as to why this is) One of the reasons he gave struck me which I quote
Certain features of the modern academic system like undepaid PhD's, interminably long postdocs, endless grant writing drudgery, and clueless funders have lowered productivity. The 1930's academic system was ineed 25x more effective at getting researchers to actually do good research.
Scott Alexander later downplays this reason, though I think there is still something to it.
(I note that he gives other reasons as well, most notably for our field that the low hanging fruit is gone. Our lack of progress on P vs NP is likely that its a hard problem, rather than the reason above. Of course, if its solved tomorrow by an outsider without funding, I will happily be proven wrong.)
Scott Alexander hits upon two types of blankfaces (without using the term).
Grant writing drudgery: the rules for how to submit get more and more detailed an onerous. This is what Scott Aaronson was alluding to. There are other ways its drudgery as well.
Clueless Funders: the people deciding who gets funded might not know the area (actually in my experience the grant I've reviews have been quite good and the problem is more not enough money to award all that are deserving.)
SO I pose the following non-rhetorically as always
1) How big a factor is the slowing down of science that blankfaces get in the way?
2) What can we do about it?