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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]Re: [tlug] [OT] Specialized insects and Linux
- Date: Tue, 3 Nov 2015 01:01:07 +0900
- From: "Stephen J. Turnbull" <stephen@example.com>
- Subject: Re: [tlug] [OT] Specialized insects and Linux
- References: <mailman.1.1446346801.28284.tlug@tlug.jp> <BAY167-W5442F8DE0A1051AD043174A22C0@phx.gbl>
Raedwolf Sumner writes: > According to this WSJ article by Matt Ridley, the “Monkeyshow” has > it exactly bassackwards. Ridley makes the point that the important > contribution to growth comes from the diffusion of new technology -- > not from its existence (i.e., basic research). Rothbard claimed that > basic research was far less important to economic growth, simply > because practical diffusion was paramount.[*] Of course, those are huge exaggerations. You can't diffuse new ideas if there are none. Ridley's article is one long sequence of post hoc ergo propter hoc fallacies. That doesn't mean he's wrong. It just means tl;dr, you're gonna have to decide for yourself anyway. Take one example: it's absolutely true that X-ray crystallography was invented by a bunch of silkworms and boll weevils trying to make more money from their product. But they wouldn't have got to square one if it weren't for a bunch of pinhead tunnel-vision ivory-tower academics who demonstrated that optics applied to X-rays, too. The problem that Japanese academia faces is that people who are really good at thinking are made to sit in meetings and write lies on forms for 70% of their time. > Of course, the Monbu are much more concerned with lofty achievements > such as prestigious awards than with mundane matters such as economic > benefits to the populace. True, they don't give a rat's ass for the populace. But in fact the priorities at Monkashow are driven in large part by mid-ground research, not really the basic stuff that gets Nobel Prizes in physics and may not be exploited for centuries ("Neutrinos have weight; that and 470 yen will buy you a latte at Starbuck's. Yay!!"), but more the much more practical stuff that gets Nobel Prizes in medicine (vaccines) or doesn't get a Nobel Prize but helps Toyota make smaller more powerful batteries. The thing is, in the end it's not basic science OR technology diffusion that generates economic growth: it's management and entrepreneurship to exploit the conjunction of needs and the tech that serves them. (I know, that's heresy on a tech list.) But we don't understand those well enough to teach them; you either have to have native talent or a mentor (which is a very expensive way to educate compared to the classroom). Both basic and applied research in communication and in business methods are needed, and (by current Monkashow definitions) those are more bunkei than rikei.
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