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Comment Re:Discouraging Science and Technical studies (Score 1) 532

But did you learn it? In my experience, people in the "hard sciences" seem to somehow think that some topics are outside the purview of science that clearly are not. This suggests that they understand science as being about test tubes more than falsification, etc, even if they had it explained to them previously. If you think the scientific method can't be applied to human behavior, you don't get the scientific method. I guess that was more of my point, rather than to say that chem and physics majors are clueless. As a result of the scrutiny that psych gets that other fields do not, many of our majors are taught things about the philosophy and history of science that don't come up in other majors, giving those who are taught these things a better understanding than those who do not. Ever try to argue that computer science isn't a science with CS and physics majors? Or that string theorists really aren't scientists because none of their predictions will be testable for centuries, if ever?

As for soliders: What makes you think that an officer doesn't have to use well constructed arguments to defend his actions to his superiors, or to motivate the troops under her command? Or understand the culture of a country where they are deployed? The liberal arts provide the tools needed. The US military academies are placing a lot more emphasis on them these days, and for good reason. The academies have been far too engineering focused in the past, and as a consequence the armed forces have suffered.

Comment Re:Discouraging Science and Technical studies (Score 2) 532

No. Just, no. Liberal arts degrees exist to give you skills that you can generalize to other fields. Engineering is not built that way. English majors run companies, practice law, lead troops into battle (West Point and VMI consistently do well in liberal arts rankings), the list goes on. Just because people don't "use" the degree doesn't make it useless. Psychology is one of the most popular undergrad degrees, but only a small number of the majors go on to become psychologists (whether clinicians, researchers, neuroscientists, or counselors), and yet we don't see tons of unemployed psych majors. Why? Because they have a good understanding of the scientific method (one of the only disciplines that actually spells it out to their majors...a psych major could give a better definition of science than most "hard science" majors who still think it is just about math and test tubes), statistics, and human behavior. A lot of companies are realizing that business majors know how to wear a tie and give a powerpoint, but actually have no idea how to read, write, and think critically. And what degree(s) could give them those skills, may I ask?

Comment Re:Patents as well (Score 1) 323

Not to mention that *everybody* puts PDFs on their websites these days. Every time someone moans about academic pay walls, they should use google (not even friggin google scholar!) to find the webpage(s) of the author(s), and they should be able to get it. I do this all the time to avoid waiting on interlibrary loans, crappy databases etc. A caveat is that there usually must be an author still active to have a page to host it.

Also, here is another problem most non-academic /.-ers don't know about. Someone has to pay to publish it. So, if the journal is closed, subscriptions pay for it, and if the journal is open, the authors must pay! Some granting agencies really don't like paying for articles to get published when they don't have to.

Comment Re:Bioscience is a ponzi/pyramid scheme (Score 1) 694

There are still several times more PhDs graduating each year than their are jobs. It doesn't help that virtually all departments/fields/disciplines/programs are structured to produce future professors, either. The whole thing is sort of a ponzi scheme, and as a young grad student I'm a bit scared when Nature and the Chronicle of Higher Ed suddenly start posting numerous articles calling it such, or criticizing how it works. I don't call that cynicism, but honesty.

Comment Re:Bleh... more slashdot career flamebait (Score 1) 694

I'm sure your friends who get drunk on Tuesday nights will have enough publications to get a decent post doc when they are done. I'm currently a grad student, and I know people like that. As much as I'd love to party with them, I don't envy them, even when I am in the lab on Tuesday nights. Your friends are also lucky to work on projects that they care about, rather than being forced to work on grant projects that they aren't that interested in, or to have faculty call them asking them why they aren't in the lab at 9 on a Saturday morning. Note that neither of these are a huge problem in my case (only one lame project compared to a few cool ones) and I don't work for a PI that demands that I work weekends (although I do anyway).

Conferences in Prague and SF? How much of that do they have to pay for out of pocket? The silly thing about academia is how the money works. I once explained to my dad (a retired air force colonel) that if the military was ran like academia, each squadron (or regiment, or ship, etc) would have to write a grant to congress to get money to fly to the war zone, write the DoD to pay for the ammo, and then write the UN for some cash for food, ask the next commander in the chain of command to pay for the flights back, etc. And then they would still have to buy their guns with their own cash. Oh, and each guy or gal going through basic would be told on day one that they'd end up a four star general or admiral one day.

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