Until it was pissed on.CC-Marley wrote:
Really tied the room together, did it not?Superior Mind wrote:
A young trophy wife, in the parlance of our times. She owed money all over town, including to known pornographers.
![https://i.imgur.com/maVpUMN.png](https://i.imgur.com/maVpUMN.png)
Until it was pissed on.CC-Marley wrote:
Really tied the room together, did it not?Superior Mind wrote:
A young trophy wife, in the parlance of our times. She owed money all over town, including to known pornographers.
Sure, applied science has a base of abstract science - mostly, there's a lot of supposedly abstract science which is claimed by the purists but never really was - but what real outcomes have University pure literature departments produced?Spark wrote:
And ftr pure science for its own sake >>> "directed" science, in terms of outcomes, any day. You can see the latter more easily, but the gold the former turns up is without par.
I don't agree with that statement at all.A maths academic, and most 'theoretical' science academics, are closer to a philosophy don than an engineer.
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2012-09-09 04:52:27)
I'd agree with Spark here tbh. Apart from integration, geometry and trig, engineers get a very light dose of math. Most of math, outside of the applied stuff we were taught, is mental masturbation.Dilbert_X wrote:
I don't agree with that statement at all.Spark wrote:
A maths academic, and most 'theoretical' science academics, are closer to a philosophy don than an engineer.
Clearly you did a very lightweight engineering course.integration, geometry and trig
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2012-09-09 05:14:27)
I had to take three semesters of calculus, differentiation, integration and multivariable, a semester of differential equations and one of statistical analysis. Most of engineering was trig, geometry, algebra and single variable calc.Dilbert_X wrote:
I am aware of what maths geeks do, and theoretical science academics, there's no connection or similarity with philosophy whatever.
They're all abstract, but that doesn't make them 'close' in any shape or form, philosophy and physics couldn't be any more utterly different.Clearly you did a very lightweight engineering course.integration, geometry and trig
So you don't agree with the humanities graduate student or the science graduate student, who both say more or less the same thing about academia (and both who celebrate and love that fact of academia most, which you seem to revile)? Seems like you're being rather stubborn about something you evidently know very little about. You did engineering at university, so what makes you think you know more about graduate-level research and the 'abstraction' involved (or, to phrase it as your more pedestrian complaint, the 'removedness' of research from the 'real world') than Spark? High level math and abstract science crosses over into philosophy all the time: think modal logic, fatalism, post-Godelian thinking re: infinity and its relation to the postmodern episteme. There are plenty of grey areas where a philosophy don tackles the same question, in just as abstracted and removed a fashion, as a maths savant. Both spend their entire academic day buried in arcane papers and scribbling frantically on notepads of paper, with no care whatsoever about its real-world benefit or 'payoff'. Your lofty phrase that science and maths research is all about unlocking the secrets of the universe and bequeathing tangible benefits to us all is complete rhetoric... and complete bullshit, too, for that matter. You are now basically telling the two people on D&ST with the most experience of academia that they are wrong, countering with your engineer-based impressions of science, and your experience of undergrad+applied postgrad what... 25 years ago? Well done. You are arguing with all of the tact and foundational strength of Jay.Dilbert_X wrote:
I am aware of what maths geeks do, and theoretical science academics, there's no connection or similarity with philosophy whatever.
They're all abstract, but that doesn't make them 'close' in any shape or form, philosophy and physics couldn't be any more utterly different.Clearly you did a very lightweight engineering course.integration, geometry and trig
Last edited by aynrandroolz (2012-09-09 07:39:26)
There are very few subfields of maths that don't crop up often in theoretical physics in one way or another tbf. A lot of it looks suspiciously similar to straight abstract algebra, which is about as pure as they get in terms of subfields of maths.Jay wrote:
I'd agree with Spark here tbh. Apart from integration, geometry and trig, engineers get a very light dose of math. Most of math, outside of the applied stuff we were taught, is mental masturbation.Dilbert_X wrote:
I don't agree with that statement at all.Spark wrote:
A maths academic, and most 'theoretical' science academics, are closer to a philosophy don than an engineer.
Not a graduate student yet, tbf, even if the stuff I study is exclusively reserved for grad school at any place that isn't the ANU, it seems (and, if you consider this insane QFT reading course, way beyond). But I have done some proper research as part of my degree. And ofc I know a lot of research academics in both maths and physics well enough to know what goes on. Whilst there are a few who disregard metaphysical concerns in lieu of "shut up and calculate", they're rare and these sorts of questions do constantly bother most physicists and many mathematicians. Quantum mechanics and its successors have ensured that. There are a whole range of deeply philosophical questions that physical or mathematical theories have thrown up that many people feel that we simply don't have satisfactory answers for at this stage. Like, for example, what the fuck the Dirac equation is doing buried in the middle of deep geometric theories in pure mathematics.aynrandroolz wrote:
So you don't agree with the humanities graduate student or the science graduate student, who both say more or less the same thing about academia (and both who celebrate and love that fact of academia most, which you seem to revile)? Seems like you're being rather stubborn about something you evidently know very little about. You did engineering at university, so what makes you think you know more about graduate-level research and the 'abstraction' involved (or, to phrase it as your more pedestrian complaint, the 'removedness' of research from the 'real world') than Spark? High level math and abstract science crosses over into philosophy all the time: think modal logic, fatalism, post-Godelian thinking re: infinity and its relation to the postmodern episteme. There are plenty of grey areas where a philosophy don tackles the same question, in just as abstracted and removed a fashion, as a maths savant. Both spend their entire academic day buried in arcane papers and scribbling frantically on notepads of paper, with no care whatsoever about its real-world benefit or 'payoff'. Your lofty phrase that science and maths research is all about unlocking the secrets of the universe and bequeating tangible benefits to us all is complete rhetoric... and complete bullshit, too, for that matter. You are now basically telling the two people on D&ST with the most experience of academia that they are wrong, countering with your engineer-based impressions of science, and your experience of undergrad+applied postgrad what... 25 years ago? Well done. You are arguing with all of the tact and foundational strength of Jay.Dilbert_X wrote:
I am aware of what maths geeks do, and theoretical science academics, there's no connection or similarity with philosophy whatever.
They're all abstract, but that doesn't make them 'close' in any shape or form, philosophy and physics couldn't be any more utterly different.Clearly you did a very lightweight engineering course.integration, geometry and trig
Btw here's an article from today that is quite germane to this debate. This reflects the sentiment I expressed when I said that you (as well as many other people) are drunk with the ideology of science and scientific rationalism and technicism and all of these other -isms and ideologies that have risen to the fore of public consciousness in a post-religion, secular age. It's the Grauniad, I know, but whether or not you agree with its politics, I don't think you're going to find many other mass-circulation papers that care about this debate: http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2012/ … nce-krauss ...
Last edited by Spark (2012-09-09 07:45:59)
That applies to the history of pure maths and scientific academia, too. Rich men with lots of time and money indulging in intellectual endeavours instead of tilling fields, or pursuing mercantile interests. Less than two centuries ago we had the singular figure of the polymath, who actually saw no great division between either 'side' (if sides even properly exist), and who pursued both with equal interest and ease. You make out in your blinkered view of 'academic history' that it was only the ones interested in philosophy and the arts who were rich aimless wankers, whilst all the maths theorists were, of course, giving stuff back to the populace everyday. Laughable. Utterly risible. Your 'institutional' critique of academia as "esoteric" and self-justifying, only existing to continue giving jobs and continuing the abstract research of scholars past... applies to ALL areas of academia, if you want to view it as cynically as you do. You can't just be cynical about one department and then lofty and idealist about another. That's an hilarious bias. And as for your point "what does an expert in Thomas Pynchon know?", well hopefully a lot more than just the what-where-how of Thomas Pynchon's books. Again, you tragically misunderstand the nature of an academic's work. I have already spoken before about how texts and authors are just prisms, starting-points, mental triggers for references and deeper research. It would be a very intellectually stillborn life indeed to spend 30 years just reading a book and writing endlessly about what happens inside that one 500 page book. I don't think anyone is making a living in that way.Dilbs wrote:
You're missing the point on the history of 'academia'. Historically its been pursued or funded by rich men with time or money on their hands more or less as a hobby. To claim what has historically been no more than a hobby is some great intellectual enterprise deserving of funding and kudos is laughable.
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Last edited by Spark (2012-09-09 08:23:01)
Dilbert has an issue with us funding academics... I guess he has no issue with the £100 billions we throw away on other stuff with no immediate payback or 'result'.Shocking wrote:
Well, as Neil Degrasse Tyson says though the good thing about string theorists is that they don't really impact the budget. All they need are a library, a pen and paper. Much like 95% of the humanities research.
Last edited by Macbeth (2012-09-09 15:12:17)
Its interesting you find time to poke fun at something like Dungeons and Dragons, I honestly don't see any more or less value in that than people who "spend their entire academic day buried in arcane papers and scribbling frantically on notepads of paper, with no care whatsoever about its real-world benefit or 'payoff'".aynrandroolz wrote:
The whole two page long rant against humanities academics and students is, for the 25th time on BF2s, mostly a bunch of grumpy old men having a piss and a fart over nothing. I'm sorry your university experience was dominated by 95% male classrooms, dungeons and dragons, and endless textbooks. You can drop the juvenile and baseless 'campus rivalry' now, though. You're old enough to think.
Yup, they funded many things, or did the work themselves, academia, musical composition, orchestras, art, buildings, gardens, tea and spice clippers, piracy, small wars and so on, you shouldn't try to feel so special.Rich men with lots of time and money indulging in intellectual endeavours instead of tilling fields, or pursuing mercantile interests.
What I've said is that in science there is at least some prospect of something coming out of the huge project that is scientific research which might be of use or interest to humanity as a whole, projects and funding can be reasonably carefully allocated depending on how the govt sees fit.Less than two centuries ago we had the singular figure of the polymath, who actually saw no great division between either 'side' (if sides even properly exist), and who pursued both with equal interest and ease. You make out in your blinkered view of 'academic history' that it was only the ones interested in philosophy and the arts who were rich aimless wankers, whilst all the maths theorists were, of course, giving stuff back to the populace everyday. Laughable. Utterly risible. Your 'institutional' critique of academia as "esoteric" and self-justifying, only existing to continue giving jobs and continuing the abstract research of scholars past... applies to ALL areas of academia,
aynrandroolz wrote:
The reason my preference is in the humanities is because I personally find the big questions in humanities more intriguing and compelling.
Dilbert_X wrote:
Such as? I don't see any 'big questions' discussed in your dept.
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2012-09-10 06:48:13)
I don't measure the value of research by how much money or makes, and I would hazard that very, very few scientists do.The 'humanities' are just a huge black pit, I'm doubtful anything will ever come out of it, if it ever has.
Worth reading. Quantum Diaries, ftr, is probably the best source of compiled on-the-ground HEP chatter (so LHC, Fermilab etc) that I know.The one downside of all the differences in taste is that some denizens of the art world think that since the arts have no or only weak objective standards, science cannot have any either. This leads to nonsense like the claim that science is purely cultural. Conversely, there is the equally ridiculous perception that the arts should have objective standards like science. Salt herring is an acquired taste (shudder).
So let us recognize that science and the arts are indeed very different in how they make judgments and celebrate the diversity permitted by the subjectivity in the arts. After all, life would be very boring if all we had to read was Margaret Atwood (b. 1939) or Farley Mowat, (b. 1921).
Surely not.some denizens of the art world think that since the arts have no or only weak objective standards
Wouldn't we be better off giving typewriters to chimps for all the 'big thinking' which comes out of it?or even of remote passing interest to someone outside academia maybe.
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