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:
- Can spend more time on actual research.
- A lot more freedom with regard to what kind of research one can pursue.
- Cleaner mental separation between money-earning job and research time (less frustration about "I could be doing research now, instead of spending time on this stupid administrative thing").
- Easier to take time off from research if feeling stressed out.
Some disadvantages:
- Harder to network effectively.
- Need to get around journal paywalls somehow.
- Journals might be biased against freelance researchers.
- Easier to take time off from research if feeling lazy.
- Harder to combat akrasia.
- It might actually be better to spend some time doing research under others before doing it on your own.
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.
Is calling someone here Glenn Beck equivalent to Godwination?
wfg's post strikes me as almost entirely reasonable (except the last question, which is pointless to ask) and your response as excessively defensive.
Also, you're saying this to someone who says he's a past donor and has not yet ruled out being a future donor. This is someone who could reasonably expect his questions to be taken seriously.
(I have some experience of involvement in a charity that suffers a relentless barrage of blitheringly stupid questions from idiots, and my volunteer role is media handling - mostly I come up with good and effective soundbites. So I appreciate and empathise with your frustration, but I think I can state with some experience behind me that your response is actually terrible.)
Okay. Given your and the folks who downvoted my comment's perceptions, I'll revise my opinion on the matter. I'll also put that under "analogies not to use"; I was probably insufficiently familiar with the pop culture.
The thing I meant to say was just... Roko made a post, Nick suggested it gave bad impressions, Roko deleted it. wfg spent hours commenting again and again about how he had been asked to delete it, perhaps by someone "high up within SIAI", and how future censorship might be imminent, how the fact that Roko had had a basc... (read more)