blog/content/post/2006/06/26/2006-06-26-the-power-of-the...

3.5 KiB
Raw Blame History

title author date wordtwit_post_info categories
”The Power of the Marginal” kazu634 2006-06-26
O:8:"stdClass":13:{s:6:"manual";b:0;s:11:"tweet_times";i:1;s:5:"delay";i:0;s:7:"enabled";i:1;s:10:"separation";s:2:"60";s:7:"version";s:3:"3.7";s:14:"tweet_template";b:0;s:6:"status";i:2;s:6:"result";a:0:{}s:13:"tweet_counter";i:2;s:13:"tweet_log_ids";a:1:{i:0;i:2419;}s:9:"hash_tags";a:0:{}s:8:"accounts";a:1:{i:0;s:7:"kazu634";}}
つれづれ

The Power of the Marginal

 Paul Grahamのサイトで最新のエッセーが公開されました。“The Power of the Marginal”です。

 しばしば挑発的(provocative)と表されるPaulのエッセーですが、今回もまた非常にprovocativeで、かつinterestingなものになっているように思います…と言っても、まだ2/3程度しか読んでいないのですが。

 Testのセクションでは、文系と理系の学問の評価基準について触れられていて、「なるほど」と感心してしまいました。特にこのあたりです:

One way to tell whether a field has consistent standards is the overlap between the leading practitioners and the people who teach the subject in universities. At one end of the scale you have fields like math and physics, where nearly all the teachers are among the best practitioners. In the middle are medicine, law, history, architecture, and computer science, where many are. At the bottom are business, literature, and the visual arts, where theres almost no overlap between the teachers and the leading practitioners. Its this end that gives rise to phrases like “those who cant do, teach.”

Incidentally, this scale might be helpful in deciding what to study in college. When I was in college the rule seemed to be that you should study whatever you were most interested in. But in retrospect youre probably better off studying something moderately interesting with someone whos good at it than something very interesting with someone who isnt. You often hear people say that you shouldnt major in business in college, but this is actually an instance of a more general rule: dont learn things from teachers who are bad at them.

How much you should worry about being an outsider depends on the quality of the insiders. If youre an amateur mathematician and think youve solved a famous open problem, better go back and check. When I was in grad school, a friend in the math department had the job of replying to people who sent in proofs of Fermats last theorem and so on, and it did not seem as if he saw it as a valuable source of tips more like manning a mental health hotline. Whereas if the stuff youre writing seems different from what English professors are interested in, thats not necessarily a problem.