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主题:推荐一篇文章给想要献身科学事业,或者正在献身的人们 -- fengshui

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  • 家园 推荐一篇文章给想要献身科学事业,或者正在献身的人们

    大智若愚

    The importance of stupidity in scientific research

    Martin A. Schwartz

    Department of Microbiology, UVA Health System, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22908, USA

    e-mail: [email protected]

    Accepted 9 April 2008

    I recently saw an old friend for the first time in many years. We had been Ph.D. students at the same time, both studying science, although in different areas. She later dropped out of graduate school, went to Harvard Law School and is now a senior lawyer for a major environmental organization. At some point, the conversation turned to why she had left graduate school. To my utter astonishment, she said it was because it made her feel stupid. After a couple of years of feeling stupid every day, she was ready to do something else.

    I had thought of her as one of the brightest people I knew and her subsequent career supports that view. What she said bothered me. I kept thinking about it; sometime the next day, it hit me. Science makes me feel stupid too. It's just that I've gotten used to it. So used to it, in fact, that I actively seek out new opportunities to feel stupid. I wouldn't know what to do without that feeling. I even think it's supposed to be this way. Let me explain.

    For almost all of us, one of the reasons that we liked science in high school and college is that we were good at it. That can't be the only reason – fascination with understanding the physical world and an emotional need to discover new things has to enter into it too. But high-school and college science means taking courses, and doing well in courses means getting the right answers on tests. If you know those answers, you do well and get to feel smart.

    A Ph.D., in which you have to do a research project, is a whole different thing. For me, it was a daunting task. How could I possibly frame the questions that would lead to significant discoveries; design and interpret an experiment so that the conclusions were absolutely convincing; foresee difficulties and see ways around them, or, failing that, solve them when they occurred? My Ph.D. project was somewhat interdisciplinary and, for a while, whenever I ran into a problem, I pestered the faculty in my department who were experts in the various disciplines that I needed. I remember the day when Henry Taube (who won the Nobel Prize two years later) told me he didn't know how to solve the problem I was having in his area. I was a third-year graduate student and I figured that Taube knew about 1000 times more than I did (conservative estimate). If he didn't have the answer, nobody did.

    That's when it hit me: nobody did. That's why it was a research problem. And being my research problem, it was up to me to solve. Once I faced that fact, I solved the problem in a couple of days. (It wasn't really very hard; I just had to try a few things.) The crucial lesson was that the scope of things I didn't know wasn't merely vast; it was, for all practical purposes, infinite. That realization, instead of being discouraging, was liberating. If our ignorance is infinite, the only possible course of action is to muddle through as best we can.

    I'd like to suggest that our Ph.D. programs often do students a disservice in two ways. First, I don't think students are made to understand how hard it is to do research. And how very, very hard it is to do important research. It's a lot harder than taking even very demanding courses. What makes it difficult is that research is immersion in the unknown. We just don't know what we're doing. We can't be sure whether we're asking the right question or doing the right experiment until we get the answer or the result. Admittedly, science is made harder by competition for grants and space in top journals. But apart from all of that, doing significant research is intrinsically hard and changing departmental, institutional or national policies will not succeed in lessening its intrinsic difficulty.

    Second, we don't do a good enough job of teaching our students how to be productively stupid – that is, if we don't feel stupid it means we're not really trying. I'm not talking about `relative stupidity', in which the other students in the class actually read the material, think about it and ace the exam, whereas you don't. I'm also not talking about bright people who might be working in areas that don't match their talents. Science involves confronting our `absolute stupidity'. That kind of stupidity is an existential fact, inherent in our efforts to push our way into the unknown. Preliminary and thesis exams have the right idea when the faculty committee pushes until the student starts getting the answers wrong or gives up and says, `I don't know'. The point of the exam isn't to see if the student gets all the answers right. If they do, it's the faculty who failed the exam. The point is to identify the student's weaknesses, partly to see where they need to invest some effort and partly to see whether the student's knowledge fails at a sufficiently high level that they are ready to take on a research project.

    Productive stupidity means being ignorant by choice. Focusing on important questions puts us in the awkward position of being ignorant. One of the beautiful things about science is that it allows us to bumble along, getting it wrong time after time, and feel perfectly fine as long as we learn something each time. No doubt, this can be difficult for students who are accustomed to getting the answers right. No doubt, reasonable levels of confidence and emotional resilience help, but I think scientific education might do more to ease what is a very big transition: from learning what other people once discovered to making your own discoveries. The more comfortable we become with being stupid, the deeper we will wade into the unknown and the more likely we are to make big discoveries.

    评论我会过一段时间贴上来。希望斑竹手下留情。

    • 家园 【求助】【讨论】好文, 很有启发, 谢谢.

      帮助我写下

      "以弱胜强的前提: 强者犯错为大概率事件"

    • 家园 【讨论】做事一般至少要有两条

      有兴趣, 有收获, 包括钱

      否则, 难以持久;

      by the way,

      "回复讨论 1623703 号帖 原创请使用【分类词】来注明", why I see this all the time?

    • 家园 科学需要人类献身吗?

      如果觉得科学探索的过程是一种快乐,那就当科学家吧,如果不是,那就去玩游戏吧。

      两者过程好像差不多,

      在此过程中你要不断的废寝忘食地砍怪(做实验),捡宝(收获数据),做任务(完成课题)

      得到的收获是:涨经验(涨经验),升级(发论文/评职称)。

      对我来说,通宵做实验和通宵打游戏一样,“乐趣”二字而已。

      • 家园 不错

        能够找到有兴趣的事情,并且可以长久的保持这个兴趣,这是多么幸福的事情啊!我至今还没有找到。

    • 家园 想了想

      我觉得我还是不适合做数学……缺乏耐心,碰到障碍就退缩,经常性的一个月没想法然而一两天内突击一把,这都不是好的学习习惯。何况数学虽然有趣——在我看来比科学更加有趣,因为对象更加抽象简单,解释起来却无限复杂,这是一门永远年轻的学科,但是我好像对她缺乏兴趣。

    • 家园 科研要么变成富人的游戏 要么成为常人谋生的工具
    • 家园 科学对我来说不是职业,更不需要献身

      对我来说科学只是兴趣。读书时我曾经花很多时间玩三国英杰传和英雄无敌。那不仅仅是玩,简直是研究,为了找出最好的策略可以反复地跟朋友讨论测试。其实科学研究就跟玩这些游戏差不多,只是你面对的不是电脑,而是大自然。当你发现了大自然的一些新的奥秘时,那种喜悦的心情跟爆机相比也没有太大的区别。区别只是为了研究科学你需要付出大得多的代价,于是我们不得不提到钱的问题。

      我一直都认为我们让古代的著名科学家如牛顿等等给忽悠了。在他们的光辉事迹鼓舞下我们以为我们可以像他们那样为科学献身,但我们忽略了一点,假如牛顿只是出身于伦敦的贫民窟,即使他再有才华也不可能搞出那么多原理来。据说牛顿的很多贡献是在瘟疫时期回老家避难时搞出来的,要是我在那种情形下恐怕只能每天盯着米店的价格板犯愁了。基本上古今中外所有的科学大牛都有着不错的家庭出身,于是他们就不需要在献身科学的同时再为柴米油盐献身,这是他们跟我们的根本区别所在。所以从我写博士论文开始我就认识到我永远成不了科学大牛,因为我没那本钱。

      所以科学只能是我的兴趣。就像研究英雄无敌并不需要玩家个个都是骨灰级一样,研究科学也并不需要你一定是大牛。至于我的职业,虽然我曾经的某个职位有过科学家的称呼,但事实上我当时所做的只是项目经理的工作,documentation, meeting, presentation, 等等,跟科学研究没有太大的关系。后来我做了教师,一遍遍地在课堂上向学生鼓吹,但那还不是研究,而仅仅是......鼓吹吧,正如当年我的教授向我鼓吹的那样。我需要做这些跟科学没有太大关系的事,因为我要养家糊口让老婆孩子过得好一些。

      但除此之外,我还是热爱科学。我会因为半夜醒来时一个突发的idea而梦游般回到书房工作;我会跟同事或学生在餐馆里大聊某个研究课题,兴之所至在餐巾纸上推导公式;我也会很认真地审阅每一篇peer review的文章,兴奋地把它们枪毙或判缓刑。如果没有科学,我的人生就不会有这些精彩的瞬间,而只是日复一日的routine work.

      如果我死后能够拥有墓志铭的话,我希望在我的墓碑上写上"selected publications......".

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