| ABOUT US | ARCHIVES | LINKS | RSS FEED | MONDAYS | |

3quarksdaily

An Eclectic Digest of Science, Art and Literature

« Now You Too Can Follow the Oil Money | Main | Iraq, an American ‘Nakbah’ »

March 20, 2008

Career Advice for Kanazawa from Cosma Shalizi

Speaking of Cosma, he goes to town on Satoshi Kanazawa:

...Some of those people, owing to those tastes, pursue careers in academic research; the problem for them is that they are not actually very good at what they are supposed to do, which is come up with novel, insightful, important, precise, and accurate findings.  Suppose that you are such a person, and that you do not want to switch to some other line of work to which you might be better suited.  What to do?

Perhaps the best thing which could happen to you would be to run across a new and controversial theory which speaks to you at a deep level, both intellectually and temperamentally.  If you are what William James called "tender-minded", like Teilhard de Chardin, then Medawar has already mapped out your trajectory, though nowadays the Templeton Foundation would likely be involved.  If instead you are what James called "tough-minded" — "materialistic, pessimistic, irreligious, fatalistic, sceptical" — then edification-through-obfuscation is not an option, but it wouldn't even occur to you.  Instead, you take your theory and you write papers about it, where you make claims about lots of hot-button topics, especially sex and current political controversies.  The papers seem to carry the signs of rigor, but are actually deeply fallacious — maybe you see this, but are so convinced the conclusions are right you don't care, or maybe you're so convinced of the conclusions you can't see the errors.  (There is some peer-reviewed venue where you can publish almost arbitrarily sloppy papers, so getting into print won't be a problem.)  Then — and this is the key — you start promoting your papers, and find that more salacious and provocative your spin on them, the bigger the response...

Ladies, gentlemen, and distinguished others, I give you Dr. Satoshi Kanazawa of the London School of Economics, the Fenimore Cooper of sociobiology, a man who has leveraged an inability to do data analysis or understand psychometrics into an official blog at Psychology Today, where he gets to advocate genocidal nuclear war as revenge for 9/11.  He seems to mean it, rather than be fukayaming.

His argument — to the extent that it is an argument and not just a wish-fulfillment fantasy — has to do with his earlier attempt to explain "why most suicide bombers are Muslims".  Leave to one side whether his attempted explanation is coherent, two things strike one on reading that. 

Posted by Robin Varghese at 03:28 PM | Permalink

Comments

good weblog...hope be successful always.

Posted by: rapidvpn | Mar 20, 2008 6:40:09 PM

After being faculty member of three leading universities, I never had enough good fortune to encounter an academic of the genius and intellectual gift of the Rev. Teilhard de Chardin.

T'is, perhaps, 'cause the majority of academicians are as mediocre as the rest of us...

Posted by: Felix E. F. Larocca MD | Mar 20, 2008 6:47:00 PM

spirited stuff. thanks.

Posted by: oliviab | Mar 21, 2008 2:29:42 AM

Post a comment






Subscribe to this blog's feed  

3QD Politics Prize

3QD ADVERTISING


3QD on Twitter


Miscellany

Lijit Search

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Add to Google


Recent Comments

Abbas Raza on Naqvi's prose is evocative of Nabokov

Ruchira on The New Inquisition

Pepito on Naqvi's prose is evocative of Nabokov

Dave Ranning on Andrew Sullivan: Leaving the Right

saifedean on Andrew Sullivan: Leaving the Right

Denis Dutton on Morgan Meis Wins $30,000 Warhol Foundation Award

jb on People Hear with Their Skin, As Well As Their Ears

Pepito on Andrew Sullivan: Leaving the Right

Pohanginapete on Wednesday Poem

Carlos on Andrew Sullivan: Leaving the Right

Ruchira on Morgan Meis Wins $30,000 Warhol Foundation Award

saifedean on Andrew Sullivan: Leaving the Right

Butters on We May Be Born With an Urge to Help

Butters on Scientists Grow Pork Meat in a Laboratory

Pepito on Andrew Sullivan: Leaving the Right

Chris Schoen on The New Inquisition

Pepito on Cyrus Hall on the Swiss Islamic Minaret Ban

Abbas Raza on congo dandies (for Abbas)

Louise Gordon on Andrew Sullivan: Leaving the Right

wagonjak on Picasso's Guernica in 3D

Gajasimha on Scientists Grow Pork Meat in a Laboratory

Pepito on Andrew Sullivan: Leaving the Right

Chris Schoen on Cyrus Hall on the Swiss Islamic Minaret Ban

Lambness on Wednesday Poem

Carlos on Picasso's Guernica in 3D


Acclaim For 3QD


"I couldn't tear myself away from 3 Quarks Daily, to the point of neglecting my work. Congratulations on this superb site."—Steven Pinker, Johnstone Professor of Psychology, Harvard University.

"I have placed 3 Quarks Daily at the head of my list of web bookmarks."—Richard Dawkins, Charles Simonyi Professor of the Public Understanding of Science at Oxford University.

"Just wanted you to know I’m one of many who reads and enjoys 3 Quarks....almost daily."—David Byrne, musician, former lead-singer of the Talking Heads, artist, intellectual.


The 3QD Prizes


Logos designed by Vicki Winters

Subscribe to this blog's feed