thinking about what WE’re thinking about
As I was sitting being annoyed at myself for derailing my plans for today by forgetting my wallet I was flicking through my rss feeds. I came across this post on Less Wrong entitled “Some Heuristics for Evaluating the Soundness of the Academic Mainstream in Unfamiliar Fields“. This piqued my interest because, in my very best grumpy old fart way, I’ve been wondering about the validity of current POE methodology, but I know very little/nothing about it beyond what I’ve heard in pub conversations.
There was a particularly good quote near the start that made me think of research in architecture in general:
As the first heuristic, we should ask if there is a lot of low-hanging fruit available in the given area, in the sense of research goals that are both interesting and doable. If yes, this means that there are clear paths to quality work open for reasonably smart people with an adequate level of knowledge and resources, which makes it unnecessary to invent clever-looking nonsense instead. In this situation, smart and capable people can just state a sound and honest plan of work on their grant applications and proceed with it.
In contrast, if a research area has reached a dead end and further progress is impossible except perhaps if some extraordinary path-breaking genius shows the way, or in an area that has never even had a viable and sound approach to begin with, it’s unrealistic to expect that members of the academic establishment will openly admit this situation and decide it’s time for a career change. What will likely happen instead is that they’ll continue producing output that will have all the superficial trappings of science and sound scholarship, but will in fact be increasingly pointless and detached from reality.
Whilst I think that there are a lot of people doing really valuable work at the moment, I don’t think that there are many people who would struggle to categorise at least some of the work that they’ve come across recently into the latter paragraph’s bucket.
I’m not sure where this goes, there are lots of opposing arguments about the long term, unforeseeable benefits of any particular line of research, of the loss of cultural diversity if we are too focused on the impact that work has. Even after all of this, I can’t help feeling that we are not yet done with exploring the obvious stuff in architecture, but it might just need us to do some hard work and think about things differently. I don’t think that any of the problems that we come across in architecture are provably intractable.
cutting & bleeding edges
This has been bugging me for a while. People seem to think that it is fine to pick up phrases that ‘cool people on the telly’ use (people included other cool people on the telly) and then to use them for whatever they see fit.
The one that has been really getting on my nerves recently is the seeming disregard for the different levels of newness of technology.
It is probbaly easiest to talk about this in terms of software, as this is where it gets [mis]used most often.
The cutting edge of a blade is the sharp bit, it is the pointy end of technology. It is the place that you are most likely to get hurt if you play there, but also the place where you are most likely to find the cool stuff because there aren’t many other people playing on that edge.
I don’t know if you’ve ever stabbed someone, but if you have this is going to make heaps more sense. (If not, you should probbaly give it a go. I haven’t, but I’d imagine that it could be pretty rewarding in certain circumstances.)
The bit of the knife that does the cutting is usually pretty clean, the skin that it is being cut is busy being very pissed off. Given a bit of time, that skin will stop being grumpy, and just get sad. Then is cries blody tears, and these roll off the back of the blade – the bleeding edge.
So this means that if your technology is brand new, it is cutting edge, it is exciting, but you are likely to get hurt. If it is a bit older, safer and more established then it is bleeding edge, and if it has been around for ages then it has probably been sewn up and sent home.
Rant over.
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