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yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfnk1y
ivg05r0
1,667,840,514
1,667,845,336
97
111
I'm in Ecology; species are fake. To be more precise, the Linnaean taxonomic system is outdated, and the old species/genus/family/etc titles are at best guideposts along the twisted limbs on the tree of life. We can now see those limbs in greater detail via genetic testing, which has re-shaped taxonomic groups extensively and continues to do so. As much as we love putting things into neat little boxes, the reality is that some taxonomic groups end nicely in what we'd call a single species (humans, western red cedar), while others definitely don't (ash trees, oak trees, roses, bacteria, dogs/wolves, cows/yaks). Moreover, the adherence to species-level identification in field work and in scientific literature is actively detrimental to the accuracy of the claims made by that work. An example from my specific work in forest community analysis; if I have a group of field workers working to survey a given plot and it's full of oak trees, then I know that in reality I do not have good determination between different oak "species". Even if all my field hands are graduate-level people, the decision just comes down to subjective judgements eventually. We would need genetic testing to really make a determination, and that's completely unfeasible. So I think ecological literature should move more towards recognizing that the utility of the species level ID is often limited, and does not deserve its position as the ubiquitous tool that it currently occupies. But that's all way too long, so; species are fake 🤣
Analytical chemist in cannabis testing. Cannabinoids are not a miracle drug but we all have to pretend it might be to give the industry validity. Why can’t we just admit that most of us just like getting stoned and that’s okay.
0
4,822
1.14433
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg05r0
ivf1b60
1,667,845,336
1,667,831,428
111
84
Analytical chemist in cannabis testing. Cannabinoids are not a miracle drug but we all have to pretend it might be to give the industry validity. Why can’t we just admit that most of us just like getting stoned and that’s okay.
Psychologist. All of the implicit bias stuff has low validity and reliability and has wasted millions of dollars.
1
13,908
1.321429
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg05r0
ivf59r0
1,667,845,336
1,667,833,145
111
78
Analytical chemist in cannabis testing. Cannabinoids are not a miracle drug but we all have to pretend it might be to give the industry validity. Why can’t we just admit that most of us just like getting stoned and that’s okay.
Anthropology has the unique ability to counter the racist narratives and beliefs that its responsible for creating in the centuries past. The current emerging beliefs and endorsements in anti-anti-racist rhetoric, White supremacy, race patterned disparities, and the like have a special place in Anthropological education, and can be effectively combated by educating the public on the nature of the human condition and all that it does and doesn't entail. Instead, Anthropology suffers from an overrepresentation of White liberals who will continue to focus on non-White others, placing them on shelves to collect dust, and studying *anything other* than the ways that they themselves reproduce that culture of racial homogeneity within the academic field -- rendering Anthropology virtually useless and undermining any Anthro department's ability to secure funding, advance research in critical areas, or do anything of substantive importance beyond its basic requirements of studying what it means to be human on a biological and cultural level. What a waste.
1
12,191
1.423077
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg05r0
iveslwa
1,667,845,336
1,667,827,288
111
74
Analytical chemist in cannabis testing. Cannabinoids are not a miracle drug but we all have to pretend it might be to give the industry validity. Why can’t we just admit that most of us just like getting stoned and that’s okay.
I'm in religion, technically in 'theology' not religious studies. I train ministers and chaplains. I'm pretty sure God doesn't exist. More agnostic than atheist, but even if God does exist, I don't think They matter that much. I think all the time angsting over who God is or what God wants is a distraction from making a better society here and now. But I try to understand why others think it's so important.
1
18,048
1.5
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg05r0
ivf4p3l
1,667,845,336
1,667,832,901
111
68
Analytical chemist in cannabis testing. Cannabinoids are not a miracle drug but we all have to pretend it might be to give the industry validity. Why can’t we just admit that most of us just like getting stoned and that’s okay.
Most of these "unpopular opinions" are really quite popular throughout academia imo. We're clearly just united in our misery, irreproducibility, real-life applicability, and out-of-touch HR departments.
1
12,435
1.632353
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg05r0
ivfgxyt
1,667,845,336
1,667,837,919
111
61
Analytical chemist in cannabis testing. Cannabinoids are not a miracle drug but we all have to pretend it might be to give the industry validity. Why can’t we just admit that most of us just like getting stoned and that’s okay.
I'm in literary studies. Unlike lots of my peers, I believe that literary critics' purpose is to understand and explain how literature *works*, and not to say whether it's *good* or *real* literature.
1
7,417
1.819672
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg05r0
ivfb7ap
1,667,845,336
1,667,835,618
111
59
Analytical chemist in cannabis testing. Cannabinoids are not a miracle drug but we all have to pretend it might be to give the industry validity. Why can’t we just admit that most of us just like getting stoned and that’s okay.
There is no theoretical justification for the existence of some political science subfields. In particular, the "American Politics" subfield shares pretty much all of its theory with the Comparative Politics subfield. The key difference between the two is that the former focuses on the politics of America and the latter is focused on the politics of every other country. I don't think it is unreasonable to have a regional specialization, but separating American politics into a separate subfield creates perverse incentives. For instance, to get an academic job you may be forced to clarify whether you are an "Americanist" or a "Comparativist" by either focusing your research on the United States in the former case or not researching it at all in the latter.
1
9,718
1.881356
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg05r0
iveu9yt
1,667,845,336
1,667,828,142
111
50
Analytical chemist in cannabis testing. Cannabinoids are not a miracle drug but we all have to pretend it might be to give the industry validity. Why can’t we just admit that most of us just like getting stoned and that’s okay.
The findings of most human-environment research point in directions that are economically inconvenient. Politicians are aware of what we're saying and what needs to be done but don't care because it would affect their fundraising and ability to be re-elected.
1
17,194
2.22
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg05r0
ivesaad
1,667,845,336
1,667,827,120
111
50
Analytical chemist in cannabis testing. Cannabinoids are not a miracle drug but we all have to pretend it might be to give the industry validity. Why can’t we just admit that most of us just like getting stoned and that’s okay.
I'm in public health nutrition. Sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) taxes are gross. People talk about how they are super effective as a public health intervention because "low socio-economic status populations bear the brunt of the burden of disease associated with SSB and they are most 'price sensitive' to the taxes and so they are most effective where they are needed most." I don't *deny* any of that's true, but hearing all the "equity is important, we must respect the individual!" public health practitioners basically say "This intervention works by leveraging the fact people are poor to make them behave in the way we think they need to," is *so* gross and is textbook paternalism. If asked about this aspect they'll say that the taxes can go back into public health interventions that will better the health of the community like that makes it less gross. It doesn't. Fund your interventions in ways that don't raise funds by burdening those already so burdened in the name of helping them.
1
18,216
2.22
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg05r0
ivfyz8k
1,667,845,336
1,667,844,890
111
46
Analytical chemist in cannabis testing. Cannabinoids are not a miracle drug but we all have to pretend it might be to give the industry validity. Why can’t we just admit that most of us just like getting stoned and that’s okay.
English literature. My unpopular opinion is that reviewers/editors need to give more attention to language in articles. I’m finding it harder to read/enjoy criticism due to so many buzzwords being thrown about and misused. Get to the point and be concise! Prove your intellect by directly presenting your ideas rather than relying on flowery language.
1
446
2.413043
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfhfxd
ivg05r0
1,667,838,114
1,667,845,336
41
111
Computer Scientist here. My main research area is machine learning, and my sort of unpopular opinion is that deep learning isn't very interesting and is kind of a dead end. It's been the only thing getting any oxygen for about 15 years now, and it's still providing a lot of practical advancements, but all those advancements are being gained by just throwing money at it. To play at all in the space requires you to work for one of half a dozen companies that can afford to spend $20 million on a single training pass of one model. And we know that there are significant gaps that can't be closed without some fundamental shift in the approach, but because current deep learning models are miles better than the competitors, it's not feasible for most people to give up those gains to focus on something different that might have longer term payoffs. By sheer volume of research, that's an unpopular opinion, but within the field, I haven't really said much that would be objectionable to a lot of people either. For a truly unpopular opinion in the broader field of CS and software engineering, I think the state of software development is worse today than it was in the 1980s. Prior to that point, programming operated a bit more like an art form. It wasn't so much that people consciously thought of it that way. It was, I think, more a combination of a much smaller group of people doing it combined with a lack of conscious effort to frame the problem any other way. Good code was judged in similar ways as a good novel. A writer you love may have a great facility for poetic phrasing, and that's the thing you like. That's hard to quantify though, and I think code has a similar quality. As software engineering became more of a separate discipline that was focused on metrics like code reuse, it put objective-looking metrics in place of what had previously been a much more aesthetic process of judging code quality. And I'm not sure if I think the metrics were just bad or whether the failure was in not balancing optimizing for them against something else, but either way, programming got worse both in process and result. Give me a program written in the 80s with no thoughts at all toward code reuse, design patterns, dependency injection, unit test coverage, mocks, and all the other ostensibly great things about modern software development. If that code was written by a good programmer who had solid aesthetic judgements about how his code should be structured and written, it will be easier to work on, more bug free, faster, etc., than almost any software written today on the best engineering principles we've been able to come up with in the last 30 years. And if it were written by a bad programmer, it would be bad, but it would be more obviously bad than the average "modern" codebase.
Analytical chemist in cannabis testing. Cannabinoids are not a miracle drug but we all have to pretend it might be to give the industry validity. Why can’t we just admit that most of us just like getting stoned and that’s okay.
0
7,222
2.707317
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg05r0
iveud6r
1,667,845,336
1,667,828,186
111
31
Analytical chemist in cannabis testing. Cannabinoids are not a miracle drug but we all have to pretend it might be to give the industry validity. Why can’t we just admit that most of us just like getting stoned and that’s okay.
Lots in education, somehow, still think that schooling is primarily a psychological process in which social forces don't matter. Similarly, Theories and approaches, especially in contemporary neoliberal america, get stripped of their original social and political commitments. I saw a syllabus for a course on Critical Pedagogy and it didnt have a single reading by Freire or any other progressive. Critical Literacy gets transformed into "Critical Thinking"
1
17,150
3.580645
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg05r0
ivfena9
1,667,845,336
1,667,837,000
111
29
Analytical chemist in cannabis testing. Cannabinoids are not a miracle drug but we all have to pretend it might be to give the industry validity. Why can’t we just admit that most of us just like getting stoned and that’s okay.
Neuroscience: There is no free will.
1
8,336
3.827586
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfi2ex
ivg05r0
1,667,838,362
1,667,845,336
36
111
That studies of intelligence (as in the activities of intelligence agencies, not human or animal intellect) should be properly viewed a sub-field of history because its occasional broader theoretical claims tend to be deeply suspect or so obvious that they offer very little insight. I’m ok with this, personally, but lots within the discipline see it otherwise.
Analytical chemist in cannabis testing. Cannabinoids are not a miracle drug but we all have to pretend it might be to give the industry validity. Why can’t we just admit that most of us just like getting stoned and that’s okay.
0
6,974
3.083333
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfkric
ivg05r0
1,667,839,428
1,667,845,336
28
111
We all talk a good game about null findings and replication, but it's thankless and minimally funded work. People kinda care, but only when somebody else does it.
Analytical chemist in cannabis testing. Cannabinoids are not a miracle drug but we all have to pretend it might be to give the industry validity. Why can’t we just admit that most of us just like getting stoned and that’s okay.
0
5,908
3.964286
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfl10y
ivg05r0
1,667,839,532
1,667,845,336
29
111
Sometimes I think that philosophy should turn all of the classic stuff --- everything from Socrates and Plato to (oh) Nietzsche and Russell --- over to history departments. I think this would be better for philosophy in the long run, but mostly I don't think we can be trusted with it.
Analytical chemist in cannabis testing. Cannabinoids are not a miracle drug but we all have to pretend it might be to give the industry validity. Why can’t we just admit that most of us just like getting stoned and that’s okay.
0
5,804
3.827586
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivf10s1
ivg05r0
1,667,831,300
1,667,845,336
26
111
Computational chemistry, molecular dynamics: You can run a bunch of methods with a bunch of target properties on a single dataset and find "something". The problem is that often the size of the dataset should increase the more properties you study. In other words, you are more likely to see a fluke with a medium dataset if you use a lot of approaches. To counter this issue (ie hacking) in clinical trials Registered Reports have been introduced.
Analytical chemist in cannabis testing. Cannabinoids are not a miracle drug but we all have to pretend it might be to give the industry validity. Why can’t we just admit that most of us just like getting stoned and that’s okay.
0
14,036
4.269231
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg05r0
ivfd2kp
1,667,845,336
1,667,836,370
111
24
Analytical chemist in cannabis testing. Cannabinoids are not a miracle drug but we all have to pretend it might be to give the industry validity. Why can’t we just admit that most of us just like getting stoned and that’s okay.
Organization Studies/Science (yes, it matters, and i used to be active at the intersection). I'm no longer active as a researcher, luckily. Not only is most research utterly irrelevant for people managing organizations, I've come to find it increasingly less important what people managing organization need or want. Fuck 'm.
1
8,966
4.625
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg05r0
ivfg4n4
1,667,845,336
1,667,837,592
111
28
Analytical chemist in cannabis testing. Cannabinoids are not a miracle drug but we all have to pretend it might be to give the industry validity. Why can’t we just admit that most of us just like getting stoned and that’s okay.
History: there's a *long*-standing insistence in the field that we need to be "understandable" to the broad public. Overly-academic writing is thus "bad", and we should all be striving to popularize our work and our field as much as we can through social media, popular history writing, etc. I'm sorry, but History has long been far too specialized for that to be truly successful. We are building on generations upon generations of scholarship, while the public just occasionally watches a Ken Burns documentary at best... No one without a PhD in History is going to understand *anything* about true cutting-edge historical scholarship. No amount of social media posting, no amount of dumbing it down, could ever begin to distill the *thousands* of books in my subfield that I needed to fully understand just to *start* my own research. Sure, Historians can offer "corrections" to the most gross misinterpretations... EDIT: and yes, we can teach intro and advanced classes, and publish popularizations of our material. And that's good! But, *like every other professional field, from astrophysics to microbiology*, our serious work--our scholarship--is too specialized and technically-sophisticated to be understood by the uneducated masses or even by the chattering classes. (or even, truth be told, by other fields. The number of times I've encountered a mathematician or physicist who thinks that they know *anything* about my field--and eventry to lecture *me* on it!--is just way too many times.)
1
7,744
3.964286
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfnk1y
ivf1b60
1,667,840,514
1,667,831,428
97
84
I'm in Ecology; species are fake. To be more precise, the Linnaean taxonomic system is outdated, and the old species/genus/family/etc titles are at best guideposts along the twisted limbs on the tree of life. We can now see those limbs in greater detail via genetic testing, which has re-shaped taxonomic groups extensively and continues to do so. As much as we love putting things into neat little boxes, the reality is that some taxonomic groups end nicely in what we'd call a single species (humans, western red cedar), while others definitely don't (ash trees, oak trees, roses, bacteria, dogs/wolves, cows/yaks). Moreover, the adherence to species-level identification in field work and in scientific literature is actively detrimental to the accuracy of the claims made by that work. An example from my specific work in forest community analysis; if I have a group of field workers working to survey a given plot and it's full of oak trees, then I know that in reality I do not have good determination between different oak "species". Even if all my field hands are graduate-level people, the decision just comes down to subjective judgements eventually. We would need genetic testing to really make a determination, and that's completely unfeasible. So I think ecological literature should move more towards recognizing that the utility of the species level ID is often limited, and does not deserve its position as the ubiquitous tool that it currently occupies. But that's all way too long, so; species are fake 🤣
Psychologist. All of the implicit bias stuff has low validity and reliability and has wasted millions of dollars.
1
9,086
1.154762
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfnk1y
ivf59r0
1,667,840,514
1,667,833,145
97
78
I'm in Ecology; species are fake. To be more precise, the Linnaean taxonomic system is outdated, and the old species/genus/family/etc titles are at best guideposts along the twisted limbs on the tree of life. We can now see those limbs in greater detail via genetic testing, which has re-shaped taxonomic groups extensively and continues to do so. As much as we love putting things into neat little boxes, the reality is that some taxonomic groups end nicely in what we'd call a single species (humans, western red cedar), while others definitely don't (ash trees, oak trees, roses, bacteria, dogs/wolves, cows/yaks). Moreover, the adherence to species-level identification in field work and in scientific literature is actively detrimental to the accuracy of the claims made by that work. An example from my specific work in forest community analysis; if I have a group of field workers working to survey a given plot and it's full of oak trees, then I know that in reality I do not have good determination between different oak "species". Even if all my field hands are graduate-level people, the decision just comes down to subjective judgements eventually. We would need genetic testing to really make a determination, and that's completely unfeasible. So I think ecological literature should move more towards recognizing that the utility of the species level ID is often limited, and does not deserve its position as the ubiquitous tool that it currently occupies. But that's all way too long, so; species are fake 🤣
Anthropology has the unique ability to counter the racist narratives and beliefs that its responsible for creating in the centuries past. The current emerging beliefs and endorsements in anti-anti-racist rhetoric, White supremacy, race patterned disparities, and the like have a special place in Anthropological education, and can be effectively combated by educating the public on the nature of the human condition and all that it does and doesn't entail. Instead, Anthropology suffers from an overrepresentation of White liberals who will continue to focus on non-White others, placing them on shelves to collect dust, and studying *anything other* than the ways that they themselves reproduce that culture of racial homogeneity within the academic field -- rendering Anthropology virtually useless and undermining any Anthro department's ability to secure funding, advance research in critical areas, or do anything of substantive importance beyond its basic requirements of studying what it means to be human on a biological and cultural level. What a waste.
1
7,369
1.24359
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
iveslwa
ivfnk1y
1,667,827,288
1,667,840,514
74
97
I'm in religion, technically in 'theology' not religious studies. I train ministers and chaplains. I'm pretty sure God doesn't exist. More agnostic than atheist, but even if God does exist, I don't think They matter that much. I think all the time angsting over who God is or what God wants is a distraction from making a better society here and now. But I try to understand why others think it's so important.
I'm in Ecology; species are fake. To be more precise, the Linnaean taxonomic system is outdated, and the old species/genus/family/etc titles are at best guideposts along the twisted limbs on the tree of life. We can now see those limbs in greater detail via genetic testing, which has re-shaped taxonomic groups extensively and continues to do so. As much as we love putting things into neat little boxes, the reality is that some taxonomic groups end nicely in what we'd call a single species (humans, western red cedar), while others definitely don't (ash trees, oak trees, roses, bacteria, dogs/wolves, cows/yaks). Moreover, the adherence to species-level identification in field work and in scientific literature is actively detrimental to the accuracy of the claims made by that work. An example from my specific work in forest community analysis; if I have a group of field workers working to survey a given plot and it's full of oak trees, then I know that in reality I do not have good determination between different oak "species". Even if all my field hands are graduate-level people, the decision just comes down to subjective judgements eventually. We would need genetic testing to really make a determination, and that's completely unfeasible. So I think ecological literature should move more towards recognizing that the utility of the species level ID is often limited, and does not deserve its position as the ubiquitous tool that it currently occupies. But that's all way too long, so; species are fake 🤣
0
13,226
1.310811
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivf4p3l
ivfnk1y
1,667,832,901
1,667,840,514
68
97
Most of these "unpopular opinions" are really quite popular throughout academia imo. We're clearly just united in our misery, irreproducibility, real-life applicability, and out-of-touch HR departments.
I'm in Ecology; species are fake. To be more precise, the Linnaean taxonomic system is outdated, and the old species/genus/family/etc titles are at best guideposts along the twisted limbs on the tree of life. We can now see those limbs in greater detail via genetic testing, which has re-shaped taxonomic groups extensively and continues to do so. As much as we love putting things into neat little boxes, the reality is that some taxonomic groups end nicely in what we'd call a single species (humans, western red cedar), while others definitely don't (ash trees, oak trees, roses, bacteria, dogs/wolves, cows/yaks). Moreover, the adherence to species-level identification in field work and in scientific literature is actively detrimental to the accuracy of the claims made by that work. An example from my specific work in forest community analysis; if I have a group of field workers working to survey a given plot and it's full of oak trees, then I know that in reality I do not have good determination between different oak "species". Even if all my field hands are graduate-level people, the decision just comes down to subjective judgements eventually. We would need genetic testing to really make a determination, and that's completely unfeasible. So I think ecological literature should move more towards recognizing that the utility of the species level ID is often limited, and does not deserve its position as the ubiquitous tool that it currently occupies. But that's all way too long, so; species are fake 🤣
0
7,613
1.426471
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfnk1y
ivfgxyt
1,667,840,514
1,667,837,919
97
61
I'm in Ecology; species are fake. To be more precise, the Linnaean taxonomic system is outdated, and the old species/genus/family/etc titles are at best guideposts along the twisted limbs on the tree of life. We can now see those limbs in greater detail via genetic testing, which has re-shaped taxonomic groups extensively and continues to do so. As much as we love putting things into neat little boxes, the reality is that some taxonomic groups end nicely in what we'd call a single species (humans, western red cedar), while others definitely don't (ash trees, oak trees, roses, bacteria, dogs/wolves, cows/yaks). Moreover, the adherence to species-level identification in field work and in scientific literature is actively detrimental to the accuracy of the claims made by that work. An example from my specific work in forest community analysis; if I have a group of field workers working to survey a given plot and it's full of oak trees, then I know that in reality I do not have good determination between different oak "species". Even if all my field hands are graduate-level people, the decision just comes down to subjective judgements eventually. We would need genetic testing to really make a determination, and that's completely unfeasible. So I think ecological literature should move more towards recognizing that the utility of the species level ID is often limited, and does not deserve its position as the ubiquitous tool that it currently occupies. But that's all way too long, so; species are fake 🤣
I'm in literary studies. Unlike lots of my peers, I believe that literary critics' purpose is to understand and explain how literature *works*, and not to say whether it's *good* or *real* literature.
1
2,595
1.590164
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfb7ap
ivfnk1y
1,667,835,618
1,667,840,514
59
97
There is no theoretical justification for the existence of some political science subfields. In particular, the "American Politics" subfield shares pretty much all of its theory with the Comparative Politics subfield. The key difference between the two is that the former focuses on the politics of America and the latter is focused on the politics of every other country. I don't think it is unreasonable to have a regional specialization, but separating American politics into a separate subfield creates perverse incentives. For instance, to get an academic job you may be forced to clarify whether you are an "Americanist" or a "Comparativist" by either focusing your research on the United States in the former case or not researching it at all in the latter.
I'm in Ecology; species are fake. To be more precise, the Linnaean taxonomic system is outdated, and the old species/genus/family/etc titles are at best guideposts along the twisted limbs on the tree of life. We can now see those limbs in greater detail via genetic testing, which has re-shaped taxonomic groups extensively and continues to do so. As much as we love putting things into neat little boxes, the reality is that some taxonomic groups end nicely in what we'd call a single species (humans, western red cedar), while others definitely don't (ash trees, oak trees, roses, bacteria, dogs/wolves, cows/yaks). Moreover, the adherence to species-level identification in field work and in scientific literature is actively detrimental to the accuracy of the claims made by that work. An example from my specific work in forest community analysis; if I have a group of field workers working to survey a given plot and it's full of oak trees, then I know that in reality I do not have good determination between different oak "species". Even if all my field hands are graduate-level people, the decision just comes down to subjective judgements eventually. We would need genetic testing to really make a determination, and that's completely unfeasible. So I think ecological literature should move more towards recognizing that the utility of the species level ID is often limited, and does not deserve its position as the ubiquitous tool that it currently occupies. But that's all way too long, so; species are fake 🤣
0
4,896
1.644068
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
iveu9yt
ivfnk1y
1,667,828,142
1,667,840,514
50
97
The findings of most human-environment research point in directions that are economically inconvenient. Politicians are aware of what we're saying and what needs to be done but don't care because it would affect their fundraising and ability to be re-elected.
I'm in Ecology; species are fake. To be more precise, the Linnaean taxonomic system is outdated, and the old species/genus/family/etc titles are at best guideposts along the twisted limbs on the tree of life. We can now see those limbs in greater detail via genetic testing, which has re-shaped taxonomic groups extensively and continues to do so. As much as we love putting things into neat little boxes, the reality is that some taxonomic groups end nicely in what we'd call a single species (humans, western red cedar), while others definitely don't (ash trees, oak trees, roses, bacteria, dogs/wolves, cows/yaks). Moreover, the adherence to species-level identification in field work and in scientific literature is actively detrimental to the accuracy of the claims made by that work. An example from my specific work in forest community analysis; if I have a group of field workers working to survey a given plot and it's full of oak trees, then I know that in reality I do not have good determination between different oak "species". Even if all my field hands are graduate-level people, the decision just comes down to subjective judgements eventually. We would need genetic testing to really make a determination, and that's completely unfeasible. So I think ecological literature should move more towards recognizing that the utility of the species level ID is often limited, and does not deserve its position as the ubiquitous tool that it currently occupies. But that's all way too long, so; species are fake 🤣
0
12,372
1.94
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfnk1y
ivesaad
1,667,840,514
1,667,827,120
97
50
I'm in Ecology; species are fake. To be more precise, the Linnaean taxonomic system is outdated, and the old species/genus/family/etc titles are at best guideposts along the twisted limbs on the tree of life. We can now see those limbs in greater detail via genetic testing, which has re-shaped taxonomic groups extensively and continues to do so. As much as we love putting things into neat little boxes, the reality is that some taxonomic groups end nicely in what we'd call a single species (humans, western red cedar), while others definitely don't (ash trees, oak trees, roses, bacteria, dogs/wolves, cows/yaks). Moreover, the adherence to species-level identification in field work and in scientific literature is actively detrimental to the accuracy of the claims made by that work. An example from my specific work in forest community analysis; if I have a group of field workers working to survey a given plot and it's full of oak trees, then I know that in reality I do not have good determination between different oak "species". Even if all my field hands are graduate-level people, the decision just comes down to subjective judgements eventually. We would need genetic testing to really make a determination, and that's completely unfeasible. So I think ecological literature should move more towards recognizing that the utility of the species level ID is often limited, and does not deserve its position as the ubiquitous tool that it currently occupies. But that's all way too long, so; species are fake 🤣
I'm in public health nutrition. Sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) taxes are gross. People talk about how they are super effective as a public health intervention because "low socio-economic status populations bear the brunt of the burden of disease associated with SSB and they are most 'price sensitive' to the taxes and so they are most effective where they are needed most." I don't *deny* any of that's true, but hearing all the "equity is important, we must respect the individual!" public health practitioners basically say "This intervention works by leveraging the fact people are poor to make them behave in the way we think they need to," is *so* gross and is textbook paternalism. If asked about this aspect they'll say that the taxes can go back into public health interventions that will better the health of the community like that makes it less gross. It doesn't. Fund your interventions in ways that don't raise funds by burdening those already so burdened in the name of helping them.
1
13,394
1.94
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfhfxd
ivfnk1y
1,667,838,114
1,667,840,514
41
97
Computer Scientist here. My main research area is machine learning, and my sort of unpopular opinion is that deep learning isn't very interesting and is kind of a dead end. It's been the only thing getting any oxygen for about 15 years now, and it's still providing a lot of practical advancements, but all those advancements are being gained by just throwing money at it. To play at all in the space requires you to work for one of half a dozen companies that can afford to spend $20 million on a single training pass of one model. And we know that there are significant gaps that can't be closed without some fundamental shift in the approach, but because current deep learning models are miles better than the competitors, it's not feasible for most people to give up those gains to focus on something different that might have longer term payoffs. By sheer volume of research, that's an unpopular opinion, but within the field, I haven't really said much that would be objectionable to a lot of people either. For a truly unpopular opinion in the broader field of CS and software engineering, I think the state of software development is worse today than it was in the 1980s. Prior to that point, programming operated a bit more like an art form. It wasn't so much that people consciously thought of it that way. It was, I think, more a combination of a much smaller group of people doing it combined with a lack of conscious effort to frame the problem any other way. Good code was judged in similar ways as a good novel. A writer you love may have a great facility for poetic phrasing, and that's the thing you like. That's hard to quantify though, and I think code has a similar quality. As software engineering became more of a separate discipline that was focused on metrics like code reuse, it put objective-looking metrics in place of what had previously been a much more aesthetic process of judging code quality. And I'm not sure if I think the metrics were just bad or whether the failure was in not balancing optimizing for them against something else, but either way, programming got worse both in process and result. Give me a program written in the 80s with no thoughts at all toward code reuse, design patterns, dependency injection, unit test coverage, mocks, and all the other ostensibly great things about modern software development. If that code was written by a good programmer who had solid aesthetic judgements about how his code should be structured and written, it will be easier to work on, more bug free, faster, etc., than almost any software written today on the best engineering principles we've been able to come up with in the last 30 years. And if it were written by a bad programmer, it would be bad, but it would be more obviously bad than the average "modern" codebase.
I'm in Ecology; species are fake. To be more precise, the Linnaean taxonomic system is outdated, and the old species/genus/family/etc titles are at best guideposts along the twisted limbs on the tree of life. We can now see those limbs in greater detail via genetic testing, which has re-shaped taxonomic groups extensively and continues to do so. As much as we love putting things into neat little boxes, the reality is that some taxonomic groups end nicely in what we'd call a single species (humans, western red cedar), while others definitely don't (ash trees, oak trees, roses, bacteria, dogs/wolves, cows/yaks). Moreover, the adherence to species-level identification in field work and in scientific literature is actively detrimental to the accuracy of the claims made by that work. An example from my specific work in forest community analysis; if I have a group of field workers working to survey a given plot and it's full of oak trees, then I know that in reality I do not have good determination between different oak "species". Even if all my field hands are graduate-level people, the decision just comes down to subjective judgements eventually. We would need genetic testing to really make a determination, and that's completely unfeasible. So I think ecological literature should move more towards recognizing that the utility of the species level ID is often limited, and does not deserve its position as the ubiquitous tool that it currently occupies. But that's all way too long, so; species are fake 🤣
0
2,400
2.365854
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
iveud6r
ivfnk1y
1,667,828,186
1,667,840,514
31
97
Lots in education, somehow, still think that schooling is primarily a psychological process in which social forces don't matter. Similarly, Theories and approaches, especially in contemporary neoliberal america, get stripped of their original social and political commitments. I saw a syllabus for a course on Critical Pedagogy and it didnt have a single reading by Freire or any other progressive. Critical Literacy gets transformed into "Critical Thinking"
I'm in Ecology; species are fake. To be more precise, the Linnaean taxonomic system is outdated, and the old species/genus/family/etc titles are at best guideposts along the twisted limbs on the tree of life. We can now see those limbs in greater detail via genetic testing, which has re-shaped taxonomic groups extensively and continues to do so. As much as we love putting things into neat little boxes, the reality is that some taxonomic groups end nicely in what we'd call a single species (humans, western red cedar), while others definitely don't (ash trees, oak trees, roses, bacteria, dogs/wolves, cows/yaks). Moreover, the adherence to species-level identification in field work and in scientific literature is actively detrimental to the accuracy of the claims made by that work. An example from my specific work in forest community analysis; if I have a group of field workers working to survey a given plot and it's full of oak trees, then I know that in reality I do not have good determination between different oak "species". Even if all my field hands are graduate-level people, the decision just comes down to subjective judgements eventually. We would need genetic testing to really make a determination, and that's completely unfeasible. So I think ecological literature should move more towards recognizing that the utility of the species level ID is often limited, and does not deserve its position as the ubiquitous tool that it currently occupies. But that's all way too long, so; species are fake 🤣
0
12,328
3.129032
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfnk1y
ivfena9
1,667,840,514
1,667,837,000
97
29
I'm in Ecology; species are fake. To be more precise, the Linnaean taxonomic system is outdated, and the old species/genus/family/etc titles are at best guideposts along the twisted limbs on the tree of life. We can now see those limbs in greater detail via genetic testing, which has re-shaped taxonomic groups extensively and continues to do so. As much as we love putting things into neat little boxes, the reality is that some taxonomic groups end nicely in what we'd call a single species (humans, western red cedar), while others definitely don't (ash trees, oak trees, roses, bacteria, dogs/wolves, cows/yaks). Moreover, the adherence to species-level identification in field work and in scientific literature is actively detrimental to the accuracy of the claims made by that work. An example from my specific work in forest community analysis; if I have a group of field workers working to survey a given plot and it's full of oak trees, then I know that in reality I do not have good determination between different oak "species". Even if all my field hands are graduate-level people, the decision just comes down to subjective judgements eventually. We would need genetic testing to really make a determination, and that's completely unfeasible. So I think ecological literature should move more towards recognizing that the utility of the species level ID is often limited, and does not deserve its position as the ubiquitous tool that it currently occupies. But that's all way too long, so; species are fake 🤣
Neuroscience: There is no free will.
1
3,514
3.344828
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfi2ex
ivfnk1y
1,667,838,362
1,667,840,514
36
97
That studies of intelligence (as in the activities of intelligence agencies, not human or animal intellect) should be properly viewed a sub-field of history because its occasional broader theoretical claims tend to be deeply suspect or so obvious that they offer very little insight. I’m ok with this, personally, but lots within the discipline see it otherwise.
I'm in Ecology; species are fake. To be more precise, the Linnaean taxonomic system is outdated, and the old species/genus/family/etc titles are at best guideposts along the twisted limbs on the tree of life. We can now see those limbs in greater detail via genetic testing, which has re-shaped taxonomic groups extensively and continues to do so. As much as we love putting things into neat little boxes, the reality is that some taxonomic groups end nicely in what we'd call a single species (humans, western red cedar), while others definitely don't (ash trees, oak trees, roses, bacteria, dogs/wolves, cows/yaks). Moreover, the adherence to species-level identification in field work and in scientific literature is actively detrimental to the accuracy of the claims made by that work. An example from my specific work in forest community analysis; if I have a group of field workers working to survey a given plot and it's full of oak trees, then I know that in reality I do not have good determination between different oak "species". Even if all my field hands are graduate-level people, the decision just comes down to subjective judgements eventually. We would need genetic testing to really make a determination, and that's completely unfeasible. So I think ecological literature should move more towards recognizing that the utility of the species level ID is often limited, and does not deserve its position as the ubiquitous tool that it currently occupies. But that's all way too long, so; species are fake 🤣
0
2,152
2.694444
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfkric
ivfnk1y
1,667,839,428
1,667,840,514
28
97
We all talk a good game about null findings and replication, but it's thankless and minimally funded work. People kinda care, but only when somebody else does it.
I'm in Ecology; species are fake. To be more precise, the Linnaean taxonomic system is outdated, and the old species/genus/family/etc titles are at best guideposts along the twisted limbs on the tree of life. We can now see those limbs in greater detail via genetic testing, which has re-shaped taxonomic groups extensively and continues to do so. As much as we love putting things into neat little boxes, the reality is that some taxonomic groups end nicely in what we'd call a single species (humans, western red cedar), while others definitely don't (ash trees, oak trees, roses, bacteria, dogs/wolves, cows/yaks). Moreover, the adherence to species-level identification in field work and in scientific literature is actively detrimental to the accuracy of the claims made by that work. An example from my specific work in forest community analysis; if I have a group of field workers working to survey a given plot and it's full of oak trees, then I know that in reality I do not have good determination between different oak "species". Even if all my field hands are graduate-level people, the decision just comes down to subjective judgements eventually. We would need genetic testing to really make a determination, and that's completely unfeasible. So I think ecological literature should move more towards recognizing that the utility of the species level ID is often limited, and does not deserve its position as the ubiquitous tool that it currently occupies. But that's all way too long, so; species are fake 🤣
0
1,086
3.464286
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfl10y
ivfnk1y
1,667,839,532
1,667,840,514
29
97
Sometimes I think that philosophy should turn all of the classic stuff --- everything from Socrates and Plato to (oh) Nietzsche and Russell --- over to history departments. I think this would be better for philosophy in the long run, but mostly I don't think we can be trusted with it.
I'm in Ecology; species are fake. To be more precise, the Linnaean taxonomic system is outdated, and the old species/genus/family/etc titles are at best guideposts along the twisted limbs on the tree of life. We can now see those limbs in greater detail via genetic testing, which has re-shaped taxonomic groups extensively and continues to do so. As much as we love putting things into neat little boxes, the reality is that some taxonomic groups end nicely in what we'd call a single species (humans, western red cedar), while others definitely don't (ash trees, oak trees, roses, bacteria, dogs/wolves, cows/yaks). Moreover, the adherence to species-level identification in field work and in scientific literature is actively detrimental to the accuracy of the claims made by that work. An example from my specific work in forest community analysis; if I have a group of field workers working to survey a given plot and it's full of oak trees, then I know that in reality I do not have good determination between different oak "species". Even if all my field hands are graduate-level people, the decision just comes down to subjective judgements eventually. We would need genetic testing to really make a determination, and that's completely unfeasible. So I think ecological literature should move more towards recognizing that the utility of the species level ID is often limited, and does not deserve its position as the ubiquitous tool that it currently occupies. But that's all way too long, so; species are fake 🤣
0
982
3.344828
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfnk1y
ivf10s1
1,667,840,514
1,667,831,300
97
26
I'm in Ecology; species are fake. To be more precise, the Linnaean taxonomic system is outdated, and the old species/genus/family/etc titles are at best guideposts along the twisted limbs on the tree of life. We can now see those limbs in greater detail via genetic testing, which has re-shaped taxonomic groups extensively and continues to do so. As much as we love putting things into neat little boxes, the reality is that some taxonomic groups end nicely in what we'd call a single species (humans, western red cedar), while others definitely don't (ash trees, oak trees, roses, bacteria, dogs/wolves, cows/yaks). Moreover, the adherence to species-level identification in field work and in scientific literature is actively detrimental to the accuracy of the claims made by that work. An example from my specific work in forest community analysis; if I have a group of field workers working to survey a given plot and it's full of oak trees, then I know that in reality I do not have good determination between different oak "species". Even if all my field hands are graduate-level people, the decision just comes down to subjective judgements eventually. We would need genetic testing to really make a determination, and that's completely unfeasible. So I think ecological literature should move more towards recognizing that the utility of the species level ID is often limited, and does not deserve its position as the ubiquitous tool that it currently occupies. But that's all way too long, so; species are fake 🤣
Computational chemistry, molecular dynamics: You can run a bunch of methods with a bunch of target properties on a single dataset and find "something". The problem is that often the size of the dataset should increase the more properties you study. In other words, you are more likely to see a fluke with a medium dataset if you use a lot of approaches. To counter this issue (ie hacking) in clinical trials Registered Reports have been introduced.
1
9,214
3.730769
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfnk1y
ivfd2kp
1,667,840,514
1,667,836,370
97
24
I'm in Ecology; species are fake. To be more precise, the Linnaean taxonomic system is outdated, and the old species/genus/family/etc titles are at best guideposts along the twisted limbs on the tree of life. We can now see those limbs in greater detail via genetic testing, which has re-shaped taxonomic groups extensively and continues to do so. As much as we love putting things into neat little boxes, the reality is that some taxonomic groups end nicely in what we'd call a single species (humans, western red cedar), while others definitely don't (ash trees, oak trees, roses, bacteria, dogs/wolves, cows/yaks). Moreover, the adherence to species-level identification in field work and in scientific literature is actively detrimental to the accuracy of the claims made by that work. An example from my specific work in forest community analysis; if I have a group of field workers working to survey a given plot and it's full of oak trees, then I know that in reality I do not have good determination between different oak "species". Even if all my field hands are graduate-level people, the decision just comes down to subjective judgements eventually. We would need genetic testing to really make a determination, and that's completely unfeasible. So I think ecological literature should move more towards recognizing that the utility of the species level ID is often limited, and does not deserve its position as the ubiquitous tool that it currently occupies. But that's all way too long, so; species are fake 🤣
Organization Studies/Science (yes, it matters, and i used to be active at the intersection). I'm no longer active as a researcher, luckily. Not only is most research utterly irrelevant for people managing organizations, I've come to find it increasingly less important what people managing organization need or want. Fuck 'm.
1
4,144
4.041667
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfnk1y
ivfg4n4
1,667,840,514
1,667,837,592
97
28
I'm in Ecology; species are fake. To be more precise, the Linnaean taxonomic system is outdated, and the old species/genus/family/etc titles are at best guideposts along the twisted limbs on the tree of life. We can now see those limbs in greater detail via genetic testing, which has re-shaped taxonomic groups extensively and continues to do so. As much as we love putting things into neat little boxes, the reality is that some taxonomic groups end nicely in what we'd call a single species (humans, western red cedar), while others definitely don't (ash trees, oak trees, roses, bacteria, dogs/wolves, cows/yaks). Moreover, the adherence to species-level identification in field work and in scientific literature is actively detrimental to the accuracy of the claims made by that work. An example from my specific work in forest community analysis; if I have a group of field workers working to survey a given plot and it's full of oak trees, then I know that in reality I do not have good determination between different oak "species". Even if all my field hands are graduate-level people, the decision just comes down to subjective judgements eventually. We would need genetic testing to really make a determination, and that's completely unfeasible. So I think ecological literature should move more towards recognizing that the utility of the species level ID is often limited, and does not deserve its position as the ubiquitous tool that it currently occupies. But that's all way too long, so; species are fake 🤣
History: there's a *long*-standing insistence in the field that we need to be "understandable" to the broad public. Overly-academic writing is thus "bad", and we should all be striving to popularize our work and our field as much as we can through social media, popular history writing, etc. I'm sorry, but History has long been far too specialized for that to be truly successful. We are building on generations upon generations of scholarship, while the public just occasionally watches a Ken Burns documentary at best... No one without a PhD in History is going to understand *anything* about true cutting-edge historical scholarship. No amount of social media posting, no amount of dumbing it down, could ever begin to distill the *thousands* of books in my subfield that I needed to fully understand just to *start* my own research. Sure, Historians can offer "corrections" to the most gross misinterpretations... EDIT: and yes, we can teach intro and advanced classes, and publish popularizations of our material. And that's good! But, *like every other professional field, from astrophysics to microbiology*, our serious work--our scholarship--is too specialized and technically-sophisticated to be understood by the uneducated masses or even by the chattering classes. (or even, truth be told, by other fields. The number of times I've encountered a mathematician or physicist who thinks that they know *anything* about my field--and eventry to lecture *me* on it!--is just way too many times.)
1
2,922
3.464286
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivf1b60
iveslwa
1,667,831,428
1,667,827,288
84
74
Psychologist. All of the implicit bias stuff has low validity and reliability and has wasted millions of dollars.
I'm in religion, technically in 'theology' not religious studies. I train ministers and chaplains. I'm pretty sure God doesn't exist. More agnostic than atheist, but even if God does exist, I don't think They matter that much. I think all the time angsting over who God is or what God wants is a distraction from making a better society here and now. But I try to understand why others think it's so important.
1
4,140
1.135135
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
iveu9yt
ivf1b60
1,667,828,142
1,667,831,428
50
84
The findings of most human-environment research point in directions that are economically inconvenient. Politicians are aware of what we're saying and what needs to be done but don't care because it would affect their fundraising and ability to be re-elected.
Psychologist. All of the implicit bias stuff has low validity and reliability and has wasted millions of dollars.
0
3,286
1.68
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivf1b60
ivesaad
1,667,831,428
1,667,827,120
84
50
Psychologist. All of the implicit bias stuff has low validity and reliability and has wasted millions of dollars.
I'm in public health nutrition. Sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) taxes are gross. People talk about how they are super effective as a public health intervention because "low socio-economic status populations bear the brunt of the burden of disease associated with SSB and they are most 'price sensitive' to the taxes and so they are most effective where they are needed most." I don't *deny* any of that's true, but hearing all the "equity is important, we must respect the individual!" public health practitioners basically say "This intervention works by leveraging the fact people are poor to make them behave in the way we think they need to," is *so* gross and is textbook paternalism. If asked about this aspect they'll say that the taxes can go back into public health interventions that will better the health of the community like that makes it less gross. It doesn't. Fund your interventions in ways that don't raise funds by burdening those already so burdened in the name of helping them.
1
4,308
1.68
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
iveud6r
ivf1b60
1,667,828,186
1,667,831,428
31
84
Lots in education, somehow, still think that schooling is primarily a psychological process in which social forces don't matter. Similarly, Theories and approaches, especially in contemporary neoliberal america, get stripped of their original social and political commitments. I saw a syllabus for a course on Critical Pedagogy and it didnt have a single reading by Freire or any other progressive. Critical Literacy gets transformed into "Critical Thinking"
Psychologist. All of the implicit bias stuff has low validity and reliability and has wasted millions of dollars.
0
3,242
2.709677
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivf1b60
ivf10s1
1,667,831,428
1,667,831,300
84
26
Psychologist. All of the implicit bias stuff has low validity and reliability and has wasted millions of dollars.
Computational chemistry, molecular dynamics: You can run a bunch of methods with a bunch of target properties on a single dataset and find "something". The problem is that often the size of the dataset should increase the more properties you study. In other words, you are more likely to see a fluke with a medium dataset if you use a lot of approaches. To counter this issue (ie hacking) in clinical trials Registered Reports have been introduced.
1
128
3.230769
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivf59r0
iveslwa
1,667,833,145
1,667,827,288
78
74
Anthropology has the unique ability to counter the racist narratives and beliefs that its responsible for creating in the centuries past. The current emerging beliefs and endorsements in anti-anti-racist rhetoric, White supremacy, race patterned disparities, and the like have a special place in Anthropological education, and can be effectively combated by educating the public on the nature of the human condition and all that it does and doesn't entail. Instead, Anthropology suffers from an overrepresentation of White liberals who will continue to focus on non-White others, placing them on shelves to collect dust, and studying *anything other* than the ways that they themselves reproduce that culture of racial homogeneity within the academic field -- rendering Anthropology virtually useless and undermining any Anthro department's ability to secure funding, advance research in critical areas, or do anything of substantive importance beyond its basic requirements of studying what it means to be human on a biological and cultural level. What a waste.
I'm in religion, technically in 'theology' not religious studies. I train ministers and chaplains. I'm pretty sure God doesn't exist. More agnostic than atheist, but even if God does exist, I don't think They matter that much. I think all the time angsting over who God is or what God wants is a distraction from making a better society here and now. But I try to understand why others think it's so important.
1
5,857
1.054054
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivf4p3l
ivf59r0
1,667,832,901
1,667,833,145
68
78
Most of these "unpopular opinions" are really quite popular throughout academia imo. We're clearly just united in our misery, irreproducibility, real-life applicability, and out-of-touch HR departments.
Anthropology has the unique ability to counter the racist narratives and beliefs that its responsible for creating in the centuries past. The current emerging beliefs and endorsements in anti-anti-racist rhetoric, White supremacy, race patterned disparities, and the like have a special place in Anthropological education, and can be effectively combated by educating the public on the nature of the human condition and all that it does and doesn't entail. Instead, Anthropology suffers from an overrepresentation of White liberals who will continue to focus on non-White others, placing them on shelves to collect dust, and studying *anything other* than the ways that they themselves reproduce that culture of racial homogeneity within the academic field -- rendering Anthropology virtually useless and undermining any Anthro department's ability to secure funding, advance research in critical areas, or do anything of substantive importance beyond its basic requirements of studying what it means to be human on a biological and cultural level. What a waste.
0
244
1.147059
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivf59r0
iveu9yt
1,667,833,145
1,667,828,142
78
50
Anthropology has the unique ability to counter the racist narratives and beliefs that its responsible for creating in the centuries past. The current emerging beliefs and endorsements in anti-anti-racist rhetoric, White supremacy, race patterned disparities, and the like have a special place in Anthropological education, and can be effectively combated by educating the public on the nature of the human condition and all that it does and doesn't entail. Instead, Anthropology suffers from an overrepresentation of White liberals who will continue to focus on non-White others, placing them on shelves to collect dust, and studying *anything other* than the ways that they themselves reproduce that culture of racial homogeneity within the academic field -- rendering Anthropology virtually useless and undermining any Anthro department's ability to secure funding, advance research in critical areas, or do anything of substantive importance beyond its basic requirements of studying what it means to be human on a biological and cultural level. What a waste.
The findings of most human-environment research point in directions that are economically inconvenient. Politicians are aware of what we're saying and what needs to be done but don't care because it would affect their fundraising and ability to be re-elected.
1
5,003
1.56
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivf59r0
ivesaad
1,667,833,145
1,667,827,120
78
50
Anthropology has the unique ability to counter the racist narratives and beliefs that its responsible for creating in the centuries past. The current emerging beliefs and endorsements in anti-anti-racist rhetoric, White supremacy, race patterned disparities, and the like have a special place in Anthropological education, and can be effectively combated by educating the public on the nature of the human condition and all that it does and doesn't entail. Instead, Anthropology suffers from an overrepresentation of White liberals who will continue to focus on non-White others, placing them on shelves to collect dust, and studying *anything other* than the ways that they themselves reproduce that culture of racial homogeneity within the academic field -- rendering Anthropology virtually useless and undermining any Anthro department's ability to secure funding, advance research in critical areas, or do anything of substantive importance beyond its basic requirements of studying what it means to be human on a biological and cultural level. What a waste.
I'm in public health nutrition. Sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) taxes are gross. People talk about how they are super effective as a public health intervention because "low socio-economic status populations bear the brunt of the burden of disease associated with SSB and they are most 'price sensitive' to the taxes and so they are most effective where they are needed most." I don't *deny* any of that's true, but hearing all the "equity is important, we must respect the individual!" public health practitioners basically say "This intervention works by leveraging the fact people are poor to make them behave in the way we think they need to," is *so* gross and is textbook paternalism. If asked about this aspect they'll say that the taxes can go back into public health interventions that will better the health of the community like that makes it less gross. It doesn't. Fund your interventions in ways that don't raise funds by burdening those already so burdened in the name of helping them.
1
6,025
1.56
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
iveud6r
ivf59r0
1,667,828,186
1,667,833,145
31
78
Lots in education, somehow, still think that schooling is primarily a psychological process in which social forces don't matter. Similarly, Theories and approaches, especially in contemporary neoliberal america, get stripped of their original social and political commitments. I saw a syllabus for a course on Critical Pedagogy and it didnt have a single reading by Freire or any other progressive. Critical Literacy gets transformed into "Critical Thinking"
Anthropology has the unique ability to counter the racist narratives and beliefs that its responsible for creating in the centuries past. The current emerging beliefs and endorsements in anti-anti-racist rhetoric, White supremacy, race patterned disparities, and the like have a special place in Anthropological education, and can be effectively combated by educating the public on the nature of the human condition and all that it does and doesn't entail. Instead, Anthropology suffers from an overrepresentation of White liberals who will continue to focus on non-White others, placing them on shelves to collect dust, and studying *anything other* than the ways that they themselves reproduce that culture of racial homogeneity within the academic field -- rendering Anthropology virtually useless and undermining any Anthro department's ability to secure funding, advance research in critical areas, or do anything of substantive importance beyond its basic requirements of studying what it means to be human on a biological and cultural level. What a waste.
0
4,959
2.516129
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivf59r0
ivf10s1
1,667,833,145
1,667,831,300
78
26
Anthropology has the unique ability to counter the racist narratives and beliefs that its responsible for creating in the centuries past. The current emerging beliefs and endorsements in anti-anti-racist rhetoric, White supremacy, race patterned disparities, and the like have a special place in Anthropological education, and can be effectively combated by educating the public on the nature of the human condition and all that it does and doesn't entail. Instead, Anthropology suffers from an overrepresentation of White liberals who will continue to focus on non-White others, placing them on shelves to collect dust, and studying *anything other* than the ways that they themselves reproduce that culture of racial homogeneity within the academic field -- rendering Anthropology virtually useless and undermining any Anthro department's ability to secure funding, advance research in critical areas, or do anything of substantive importance beyond its basic requirements of studying what it means to be human on a biological and cultural level. What a waste.
Computational chemistry, molecular dynamics: You can run a bunch of methods with a bunch of target properties on a single dataset and find "something". The problem is that often the size of the dataset should increase the more properties you study. In other words, you are more likely to see a fluke with a medium dataset if you use a lot of approaches. To counter this issue (ie hacking) in clinical trials Registered Reports have been introduced.
1
1,845
3
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivesaad
iveslwa
1,667,827,120
1,667,827,288
50
74
I'm in public health nutrition. Sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) taxes are gross. People talk about how they are super effective as a public health intervention because "low socio-economic status populations bear the brunt of the burden of disease associated with SSB and they are most 'price sensitive' to the taxes and so they are most effective where they are needed most." I don't *deny* any of that's true, but hearing all the "equity is important, we must respect the individual!" public health practitioners basically say "This intervention works by leveraging the fact people are poor to make them behave in the way we think they need to," is *so* gross and is textbook paternalism. If asked about this aspect they'll say that the taxes can go back into public health interventions that will better the health of the community like that makes it less gross. It doesn't. Fund your interventions in ways that don't raise funds by burdening those already so burdened in the name of helping them.
I'm in religion, technically in 'theology' not religious studies. I train ministers and chaplains. I'm pretty sure God doesn't exist. More agnostic than atheist, but even if God does exist, I don't think They matter that much. I think all the time angsting over who God is or what God wants is a distraction from making a better society here and now. But I try to understand why others think it's so important.
0
168
1.48
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg98ko
ivfgxyt
1,667,848,821
1,667,837,919
68
61
Social work: That the answer to most of our research questions is this: people need more resources and structural systems/capitalism will never allow it. Individual interventions only go so far and will never fix the problems that throwing money at them will. All of our implications sections should just say: we need a more equitable society/eat the rich. But people won’t say it.
I'm in literary studies. Unlike lots of my peers, I believe that literary critics' purpose is to understand and explain how literature *works*, and not to say whether it's *good* or *real* literature.
1
10,902
1.114754
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg98ko
ivfb7ap
1,667,848,821
1,667,835,618
68
59
Social work: That the answer to most of our research questions is this: people need more resources and structural systems/capitalism will never allow it. Individual interventions only go so far and will never fix the problems that throwing money at them will. All of our implications sections should just say: we need a more equitable society/eat the rich. But people won’t say it.
There is no theoretical justification for the existence of some political science subfields. In particular, the "American Politics" subfield shares pretty much all of its theory with the Comparative Politics subfield. The key difference between the two is that the former focuses on the politics of America and the latter is focused on the politics of every other country. I don't think it is unreasonable to have a regional specialization, but separating American politics into a separate subfield creates perverse incentives. For instance, to get an academic job you may be forced to clarify whether you are an "Americanist" or a "Comparativist" by either focusing your research on the United States in the former case or not researching it at all in the latter.
1
13,203
1.152542
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
iveu9yt
ivg98ko
1,667,828,142
1,667,848,821
50
68
The findings of most human-environment research point in directions that are economically inconvenient. Politicians are aware of what we're saying and what needs to be done but don't care because it would affect their fundraising and ability to be re-elected.
Social work: That the answer to most of our research questions is this: people need more resources and structural systems/capitalism will never allow it. Individual interventions only go so far and will never fix the problems that throwing money at them will. All of our implications sections should just say: we need a more equitable society/eat the rich. But people won’t say it.
0
20,679
1.36
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivesaad
ivg98ko
1,667,827,120
1,667,848,821
50
68
I'm in public health nutrition. Sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) taxes are gross. People talk about how they are super effective as a public health intervention because "low socio-economic status populations bear the brunt of the burden of disease associated with SSB and they are most 'price sensitive' to the taxes and so they are most effective where they are needed most." I don't *deny* any of that's true, but hearing all the "equity is important, we must respect the individual!" public health practitioners basically say "This intervention works by leveraging the fact people are poor to make them behave in the way we think they need to," is *so* gross and is textbook paternalism. If asked about this aspect they'll say that the taxes can go back into public health interventions that will better the health of the community like that makes it less gross. It doesn't. Fund your interventions in ways that don't raise funds by burdening those already so burdened in the name of helping them.
Social work: That the answer to most of our research questions is this: people need more resources and structural systems/capitalism will never allow it. Individual interventions only go so far and will never fix the problems that throwing money at them will. All of our implications sections should just say: we need a more equitable society/eat the rich. But people won’t say it.
0
21,701
1.36
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg98ko
ivfyz8k
1,667,848,821
1,667,844,890
68
46
Social work: That the answer to most of our research questions is this: people need more resources and structural systems/capitalism will never allow it. Individual interventions only go so far and will never fix the problems that throwing money at them will. All of our implications sections should just say: we need a more equitable society/eat the rich. But people won’t say it.
English literature. My unpopular opinion is that reviewers/editors need to give more attention to language in articles. I’m finding it harder to read/enjoy criticism due to so many buzzwords being thrown about and misused. Get to the point and be concise! Prove your intellect by directly presenting your ideas rather than relying on flowery language.
1
3,931
1.478261
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg98ko
ivfhfxd
1,667,848,821
1,667,838,114
68
41
Social work: That the answer to most of our research questions is this: people need more resources and structural systems/capitalism will never allow it. Individual interventions only go so far and will never fix the problems that throwing money at them will. All of our implications sections should just say: we need a more equitable society/eat the rich. But people won’t say it.
Computer Scientist here. My main research area is machine learning, and my sort of unpopular opinion is that deep learning isn't very interesting and is kind of a dead end. It's been the only thing getting any oxygen for about 15 years now, and it's still providing a lot of practical advancements, but all those advancements are being gained by just throwing money at it. To play at all in the space requires you to work for one of half a dozen companies that can afford to spend $20 million on a single training pass of one model. And we know that there are significant gaps that can't be closed without some fundamental shift in the approach, but because current deep learning models are miles better than the competitors, it's not feasible for most people to give up those gains to focus on something different that might have longer term payoffs. By sheer volume of research, that's an unpopular opinion, but within the field, I haven't really said much that would be objectionable to a lot of people either. For a truly unpopular opinion in the broader field of CS and software engineering, I think the state of software development is worse today than it was in the 1980s. Prior to that point, programming operated a bit more like an art form. It wasn't so much that people consciously thought of it that way. It was, I think, more a combination of a much smaller group of people doing it combined with a lack of conscious effort to frame the problem any other way. Good code was judged in similar ways as a good novel. A writer you love may have a great facility for poetic phrasing, and that's the thing you like. That's hard to quantify though, and I think code has a similar quality. As software engineering became more of a separate discipline that was focused on metrics like code reuse, it put objective-looking metrics in place of what had previously been a much more aesthetic process of judging code quality. And I'm not sure if I think the metrics were just bad or whether the failure was in not balancing optimizing for them against something else, but either way, programming got worse both in process and result. Give me a program written in the 80s with no thoughts at all toward code reuse, design patterns, dependency injection, unit test coverage, mocks, and all the other ostensibly great things about modern software development. If that code was written by a good programmer who had solid aesthetic judgements about how his code should be structured and written, it will be easier to work on, more bug free, faster, etc., than almost any software written today on the best engineering principles we've been able to come up with in the last 30 years. And if it were written by a bad programmer, it would be bad, but it would be more obviously bad than the average "modern" codebase.
1
10,707
1.658537
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg98ko
iveud6r
1,667,848,821
1,667,828,186
68
31
Social work: That the answer to most of our research questions is this: people need more resources and structural systems/capitalism will never allow it. Individual interventions only go so far and will never fix the problems that throwing money at them will. All of our implications sections should just say: we need a more equitable society/eat the rich. But people won’t say it.
Lots in education, somehow, still think that schooling is primarily a psychological process in which social forces don't matter. Similarly, Theories and approaches, especially in contemporary neoliberal america, get stripped of their original social and political commitments. I saw a syllabus for a course on Critical Pedagogy and it didnt have a single reading by Freire or any other progressive. Critical Literacy gets transformed into "Critical Thinking"
1
20,635
2.193548
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg98ko
ivfena9
1,667,848,821
1,667,837,000
68
29
Social work: That the answer to most of our research questions is this: people need more resources and structural systems/capitalism will never allow it. Individual interventions only go so far and will never fix the problems that throwing money at them will. All of our implications sections should just say: we need a more equitable society/eat the rich. But people won’t say it.
Neuroscience: There is no free will.
1
11,821
2.344828
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfi2ex
ivg98ko
1,667,838,362
1,667,848,821
36
68
That studies of intelligence (as in the activities of intelligence agencies, not human or animal intellect) should be properly viewed a sub-field of history because its occasional broader theoretical claims tend to be deeply suspect or so obvious that they offer very little insight. I’m ok with this, personally, but lots within the discipline see it otherwise.
Social work: That the answer to most of our research questions is this: people need more resources and structural systems/capitalism will never allow it. Individual interventions only go so far and will never fix the problems that throwing money at them will. All of our implications sections should just say: we need a more equitable society/eat the rich. But people won’t say it.
0
10,459
1.888889
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfkric
ivg98ko
1,667,839,428
1,667,848,821
28
68
We all talk a good game about null findings and replication, but it's thankless and minimally funded work. People kinda care, but only when somebody else does it.
Social work: That the answer to most of our research questions is this: people need more resources and structural systems/capitalism will never allow it. Individual interventions only go so far and will never fix the problems that throwing money at them will. All of our implications sections should just say: we need a more equitable society/eat the rich. But people won’t say it.
0
9,393
2.428571
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfl10y
ivg98ko
1,667,839,532
1,667,848,821
29
68
Sometimes I think that philosophy should turn all of the classic stuff --- everything from Socrates and Plato to (oh) Nietzsche and Russell --- over to history departments. I think this would be better for philosophy in the long run, but mostly I don't think we can be trusted with it.
Social work: That the answer to most of our research questions is this: people need more resources and structural systems/capitalism will never allow it. Individual interventions only go so far and will never fix the problems that throwing money at them will. All of our implications sections should just say: we need a more equitable society/eat the rich. But people won’t say it.
0
9,289
2.344828
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg98ko
ivf10s1
1,667,848,821
1,667,831,300
68
26
Social work: That the answer to most of our research questions is this: people need more resources and structural systems/capitalism will never allow it. Individual interventions only go so far and will never fix the problems that throwing money at them will. All of our implications sections should just say: we need a more equitable society/eat the rich. But people won’t say it.
Computational chemistry, molecular dynamics: You can run a bunch of methods with a bunch of target properties on a single dataset and find "something". The problem is that often the size of the dataset should increase the more properties you study. In other words, you are more likely to see a fluke with a medium dataset if you use a lot of approaches. To counter this issue (ie hacking) in clinical trials Registered Reports have been introduced.
1
17,521
2.615385
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg98ko
ivg6nir
1,667,848,821
1,667,847,803
68
29
Social work: That the answer to most of our research questions is this: people need more resources and structural systems/capitalism will never allow it. Individual interventions only go so far and will never fix the problems that throwing money at them will. All of our implications sections should just say: we need a more equitable society/eat the rich. But people won’t say it.
Nuclear structure: literally stamp collecting. Who are these 100+ gamma-ray transitions at 0.001% intensity going to help? No one, that’s who. Pain in the butt to end up with a level scheme with 300+ transitions, just for it to be added to the database in 10 years. What’s the use?
1
1,018
2.344828
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg98ko
ivfd2kp
1,667,848,821
1,667,836,370
68
24
Social work: That the answer to most of our research questions is this: people need more resources and structural systems/capitalism will never allow it. Individual interventions only go so far and will never fix the problems that throwing money at them will. All of our implications sections should just say: we need a more equitable society/eat the rich. But people won’t say it.
Organization Studies/Science (yes, it matters, and i used to be active at the intersection). I'm no longer active as a researcher, luckily. Not only is most research utterly irrelevant for people managing organizations, I've come to find it increasingly less important what people managing organization need or want. Fuck 'm.
1
12,451
2.833333
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfg4n4
ivg98ko
1,667,837,592
1,667,848,821
28
68
History: there's a *long*-standing insistence in the field that we need to be "understandable" to the broad public. Overly-academic writing is thus "bad", and we should all be striving to popularize our work and our field as much as we can through social media, popular history writing, etc. I'm sorry, but History has long been far too specialized for that to be truly successful. We are building on generations upon generations of scholarship, while the public just occasionally watches a Ken Burns documentary at best... No one without a PhD in History is going to understand *anything* about true cutting-edge historical scholarship. No amount of social media posting, no amount of dumbing it down, could ever begin to distill the *thousands* of books in my subfield that I needed to fully understand just to *start* my own research. Sure, Historians can offer "corrections" to the most gross misinterpretations... EDIT: and yes, we can teach intro and advanced classes, and publish popularizations of our material. And that's good! But, *like every other professional field, from astrophysics to microbiology*, our serious work--our scholarship--is too specialized and technically-sophisticated to be understood by the uneducated masses or even by the chattering classes. (or even, truth be told, by other fields. The number of times I've encountered a mathematician or physicist who thinks that they know *anything* about my field--and eventry to lecture *me* on it!--is just way too many times.)
Social work: That the answer to most of our research questions is this: people need more resources and structural systems/capitalism will never allow it. Individual interventions only go so far and will never fix the problems that throwing money at them will. All of our implications sections should just say: we need a more equitable society/eat the rich. But people won’t say it.
0
11,229
2.428571
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivg98ko
ivg59rp
1,667,848,821
1,667,847,273
68
22
Social work: That the answer to most of our research questions is this: people need more resources and structural systems/capitalism will never allow it. Individual interventions only go so far and will never fix the problems that throwing money at them will. All of our implications sections should just say: we need a more equitable society/eat the rich. But people won’t say it.
I don't work in this field anymore, but did grad school in cognitive neuroscience, primarily focusing on cortical development. Neuroscientists greatly exaggerate how authoritative MRI/fMRI research is at answering questions that are essentially philosophical questions. I'll go a step further and say that most neuroscientists use anatomical phenomena to support things about philosophy/cognition they they already believe. These studies tend to have small samples and feature observations like "subject did thing, this area of the brain lit up, that's the thing area". They also tend to be done by labs that have good anatomical and biological knowledge, but middling tech and statistics knowledge, so they're rife with misunderstandings about what results show. There are other examples of things like this that aren't related to fMRI research, for instance the classic study about electrical signals from the brain pre-empting conscious choice that has shown to have numerous errors, but nevertheless is constantly trotted out to prove that free will doesn't exist. I'm not religious or anything or have any skin in that game, but it annoys me to see how flippant scientists are about causality in this specific circumstance. Many are willing to take that extra step and just assume which way the arrow points because viewing brain activity as the result of a different phenomenon, or anything more complex than the summation of action potentials, is too woo for people. It's especially annoying to me because neuroscience does only the most rudimentary job of explaining consciousness, and only with strokes so broad that it almost becomes pointless to investigate in the first place. And on the topic of how tremendously complex the behavior in question is, views are something like "yeah, but you can't possibly explain every variation in human behavior, that's an unreasonably high bar to clear. Also though, we've cleared it." People want to have it both ways: acknowledge the complexity of the problem for the purposes of never needing to explain everything (or in some cases, anything), yet simultaneously simplifying the problem for the purposes of putting the issue on the shelf. Neuroscientists are more than happy to make vast, sweeping claims about philosophy, religion, free will, whatever, but as soon as you impose the high burden to settle those philosophical questions definitively, neuroscientists back down from that ledge and start getting sloppy about what's needed to settle the issue. It's one thing to say "based on which way the wind is blowing here, I know what I think is the most reasonable explanation, and that's good enough for me", but it's another to pretend like the data definitively proves "big question" things about the brain's relationship with consciousness/cognition.
1
1,548
3.090909
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
iveu9yt
ivf4p3l
1,667,828,142
1,667,832,901
50
68
The findings of most human-environment research point in directions that are economically inconvenient. Politicians are aware of what we're saying and what needs to be done but don't care because it would affect their fundraising and ability to be re-elected.
Most of these "unpopular opinions" are really quite popular throughout academia imo. We're clearly just united in our misery, irreproducibility, real-life applicability, and out-of-touch HR departments.
0
4,759
1.36
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivf4p3l
ivesaad
1,667,832,901
1,667,827,120
68
50
Most of these "unpopular opinions" are really quite popular throughout academia imo. We're clearly just united in our misery, irreproducibility, real-life applicability, and out-of-touch HR departments.
I'm in public health nutrition. Sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) taxes are gross. People talk about how they are super effective as a public health intervention because "low socio-economic status populations bear the brunt of the burden of disease associated with SSB and they are most 'price sensitive' to the taxes and so they are most effective where they are needed most." I don't *deny* any of that's true, but hearing all the "equity is important, we must respect the individual!" public health practitioners basically say "This intervention works by leveraging the fact people are poor to make them behave in the way we think they need to," is *so* gross and is textbook paternalism. If asked about this aspect they'll say that the taxes can go back into public health interventions that will better the health of the community like that makes it less gross. It doesn't. Fund your interventions in ways that don't raise funds by burdening those already so burdened in the name of helping them.
1
5,781
1.36
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivf4p3l
iveud6r
1,667,832,901
1,667,828,186
68
31
Most of these "unpopular opinions" are really quite popular throughout academia imo. We're clearly just united in our misery, irreproducibility, real-life applicability, and out-of-touch HR departments.
Lots in education, somehow, still think that schooling is primarily a psychological process in which social forces don't matter. Similarly, Theories and approaches, especially in contemporary neoliberal america, get stripped of their original social and political commitments. I saw a syllabus for a course on Critical Pedagogy and it didnt have a single reading by Freire or any other progressive. Critical Literacy gets transformed into "Critical Thinking"
1
4,715
2.193548
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivf4p3l
ivf10s1
1,667,832,901
1,667,831,300
68
26
Most of these "unpopular opinions" are really quite popular throughout academia imo. We're clearly just united in our misery, irreproducibility, real-life applicability, and out-of-touch HR departments.
Computational chemistry, molecular dynamics: You can run a bunch of methods with a bunch of target properties on a single dataset and find "something". The problem is that often the size of the dataset should increase the more properties you study. In other words, you are more likely to see a fluke with a medium dataset if you use a lot of approaches. To counter this issue (ie hacking) in clinical trials Registered Reports have been introduced.
1
1,601
2.615385
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfb7ap
ivfgxyt
1,667,835,618
1,667,837,919
59
61
There is no theoretical justification for the existence of some political science subfields. In particular, the "American Politics" subfield shares pretty much all of its theory with the Comparative Politics subfield. The key difference between the two is that the former focuses on the politics of America and the latter is focused on the politics of every other country. I don't think it is unreasonable to have a regional specialization, but separating American politics into a separate subfield creates perverse incentives. For instance, to get an academic job you may be forced to clarify whether you are an "Americanist" or a "Comparativist" by either focusing your research on the United States in the former case or not researching it at all in the latter.
I'm in literary studies. Unlike lots of my peers, I believe that literary critics' purpose is to understand and explain how literature *works*, and not to say whether it's *good* or *real* literature.
0
2,301
1.033898
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfgxyt
iveu9yt
1,667,837,919
1,667,828,142
61
50
I'm in literary studies. Unlike lots of my peers, I believe that literary critics' purpose is to understand and explain how literature *works*, and not to say whether it's *good* or *real* literature.
The findings of most human-environment research point in directions that are economically inconvenient. Politicians are aware of what we're saying and what needs to be done but don't care because it would affect their fundraising and ability to be re-elected.
1
9,777
1.22
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfgxyt
ivesaad
1,667,837,919
1,667,827,120
61
50
I'm in literary studies. Unlike lots of my peers, I believe that literary critics' purpose is to understand and explain how literature *works*, and not to say whether it's *good* or *real* literature.
I'm in public health nutrition. Sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) taxes are gross. People talk about how they are super effective as a public health intervention because "low socio-economic status populations bear the brunt of the burden of disease associated with SSB and they are most 'price sensitive' to the taxes and so they are most effective where they are needed most." I don't *deny* any of that's true, but hearing all the "equity is important, we must respect the individual!" public health practitioners basically say "This intervention works by leveraging the fact people are poor to make them behave in the way we think they need to," is *so* gross and is textbook paternalism. If asked about this aspect they'll say that the taxes can go back into public health interventions that will better the health of the community like that makes it less gross. It doesn't. Fund your interventions in ways that don't raise funds by burdening those already so burdened in the name of helping them.
1
10,799
1.22
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
iveud6r
ivfgxyt
1,667,828,186
1,667,837,919
31
61
Lots in education, somehow, still think that schooling is primarily a psychological process in which social forces don't matter. Similarly, Theories and approaches, especially in contemporary neoliberal america, get stripped of their original social and political commitments. I saw a syllabus for a course on Critical Pedagogy and it didnt have a single reading by Freire or any other progressive. Critical Literacy gets transformed into "Critical Thinking"
I'm in literary studies. Unlike lots of my peers, I believe that literary critics' purpose is to understand and explain how literature *works*, and not to say whether it's *good* or *real* literature.
0
9,733
1.967742
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfena9
ivfgxyt
1,667,837,000
1,667,837,919
29
61
Neuroscience: There is no free will.
I'm in literary studies. Unlike lots of my peers, I believe that literary critics' purpose is to understand and explain how literature *works*, and not to say whether it's *good* or *real* literature.
0
919
2.103448
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivf10s1
ivfgxyt
1,667,831,300
1,667,837,919
26
61
Computational chemistry, molecular dynamics: You can run a bunch of methods with a bunch of target properties on a single dataset and find "something". The problem is that often the size of the dataset should increase the more properties you study. In other words, you are more likely to see a fluke with a medium dataset if you use a lot of approaches. To counter this issue (ie hacking) in clinical trials Registered Reports have been introduced.
I'm in literary studies. Unlike lots of my peers, I believe that literary critics' purpose is to understand and explain how literature *works*, and not to say whether it's *good* or *real* literature.
0
6,619
2.346154
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfd2kp
ivfgxyt
1,667,836,370
1,667,837,919
24
61
Organization Studies/Science (yes, it matters, and i used to be active at the intersection). I'm no longer active as a researcher, luckily. Not only is most research utterly irrelevant for people managing organizations, I've come to find it increasingly less important what people managing organization need or want. Fuck 'm.
I'm in literary studies. Unlike lots of my peers, I believe that literary critics' purpose is to understand and explain how literature *works*, and not to say whether it's *good* or *real* literature.
0
1,549
2.541667
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfgxyt
ivfg4n4
1,667,837,919
1,667,837,592
61
28
I'm in literary studies. Unlike lots of my peers, I believe that literary critics' purpose is to understand and explain how literature *works*, and not to say whether it's *good* or *real* literature.
History: there's a *long*-standing insistence in the field that we need to be "understandable" to the broad public. Overly-academic writing is thus "bad", and we should all be striving to popularize our work and our field as much as we can through social media, popular history writing, etc. I'm sorry, but History has long been far too specialized for that to be truly successful. We are building on generations upon generations of scholarship, while the public just occasionally watches a Ken Burns documentary at best... No one without a PhD in History is going to understand *anything* about true cutting-edge historical scholarship. No amount of social media posting, no amount of dumbing it down, could ever begin to distill the *thousands* of books in my subfield that I needed to fully understand just to *start* my own research. Sure, Historians can offer "corrections" to the most gross misinterpretations... EDIT: and yes, we can teach intro and advanced classes, and publish popularizations of our material. And that's good! But, *like every other professional field, from astrophysics to microbiology*, our serious work--our scholarship--is too specialized and technically-sophisticated to be understood by the uneducated masses or even by the chattering classes. (or even, truth be told, by other fields. The number of times I've encountered a mathematician or physicist who thinks that they know *anything* about my field--and eventry to lecture *me* on it!--is just way too many times.)
1
327
2.178571
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
iveu9yt
ivfb7ap
1,667,828,142
1,667,835,618
50
59
The findings of most human-environment research point in directions that are economically inconvenient. Politicians are aware of what we're saying and what needs to be done but don't care because it would affect their fundraising and ability to be re-elected.
There is no theoretical justification for the existence of some political science subfields. In particular, the "American Politics" subfield shares pretty much all of its theory with the Comparative Politics subfield. The key difference between the two is that the former focuses on the politics of America and the latter is focused on the politics of every other country. I don't think it is unreasonable to have a regional specialization, but separating American politics into a separate subfield creates perverse incentives. For instance, to get an academic job you may be forced to clarify whether you are an "Americanist" or a "Comparativist" by either focusing your research on the United States in the former case or not researching it at all in the latter.
0
7,476
1.18
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfb7ap
ivesaad
1,667,835,618
1,667,827,120
59
50
There is no theoretical justification for the existence of some political science subfields. In particular, the "American Politics" subfield shares pretty much all of its theory with the Comparative Politics subfield. The key difference between the two is that the former focuses on the politics of America and the latter is focused on the politics of every other country. I don't think it is unreasonable to have a regional specialization, but separating American politics into a separate subfield creates perverse incentives. For instance, to get an academic job you may be forced to clarify whether you are an "Americanist" or a "Comparativist" by either focusing your research on the United States in the former case or not researching it at all in the latter.
I'm in public health nutrition. Sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) taxes are gross. People talk about how they are super effective as a public health intervention because "low socio-economic status populations bear the brunt of the burden of disease associated with SSB and they are most 'price sensitive' to the taxes and so they are most effective where they are needed most." I don't *deny* any of that's true, but hearing all the "equity is important, we must respect the individual!" public health practitioners basically say "This intervention works by leveraging the fact people are poor to make them behave in the way we think they need to," is *so* gross and is textbook paternalism. If asked about this aspect they'll say that the taxes can go back into public health interventions that will better the health of the community like that makes it less gross. It doesn't. Fund your interventions in ways that don't raise funds by burdening those already so burdened in the name of helping them.
1
8,498
1.18
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
iveud6r
ivfb7ap
1,667,828,186
1,667,835,618
31
59
Lots in education, somehow, still think that schooling is primarily a psychological process in which social forces don't matter. Similarly, Theories and approaches, especially in contemporary neoliberal america, get stripped of their original social and political commitments. I saw a syllabus for a course on Critical Pedagogy and it didnt have a single reading by Freire or any other progressive. Critical Literacy gets transformed into "Critical Thinking"
There is no theoretical justification for the existence of some political science subfields. In particular, the "American Politics" subfield shares pretty much all of its theory with the Comparative Politics subfield. The key difference between the two is that the former focuses on the politics of America and the latter is focused on the politics of every other country. I don't think it is unreasonable to have a regional specialization, but separating American politics into a separate subfield creates perverse incentives. For instance, to get an academic job you may be forced to clarify whether you are an "Americanist" or a "Comparativist" by either focusing your research on the United States in the former case or not researching it at all in the latter.
0
7,432
1.903226
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivf10s1
ivfb7ap
1,667,831,300
1,667,835,618
26
59
Computational chemistry, molecular dynamics: You can run a bunch of methods with a bunch of target properties on a single dataset and find "something". The problem is that often the size of the dataset should increase the more properties you study. In other words, you are more likely to see a fluke with a medium dataset if you use a lot of approaches. To counter this issue (ie hacking) in clinical trials Registered Reports have been introduced.
There is no theoretical justification for the existence of some political science subfields. In particular, the "American Politics" subfield shares pretty much all of its theory with the Comparative Politics subfield. The key difference between the two is that the former focuses on the politics of America and the latter is focused on the politics of every other country. I don't think it is unreasonable to have a regional specialization, but separating American politics into a separate subfield creates perverse incentives. For instance, to get an academic job you may be forced to clarify whether you are an "Americanist" or a "Comparativist" by either focusing your research on the United States in the former case or not researching it at all in the latter.
0
4,318
2.269231
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfyz8k
ivfhfxd
1,667,844,890
1,667,838,114
46
41
English literature. My unpopular opinion is that reviewers/editors need to give more attention to language in articles. I’m finding it harder to read/enjoy criticism due to so many buzzwords being thrown about and misused. Get to the point and be concise! Prove your intellect by directly presenting your ideas rather than relying on flowery language.
Computer Scientist here. My main research area is machine learning, and my sort of unpopular opinion is that deep learning isn't very interesting and is kind of a dead end. It's been the only thing getting any oxygen for about 15 years now, and it's still providing a lot of practical advancements, but all those advancements are being gained by just throwing money at it. To play at all in the space requires you to work for one of half a dozen companies that can afford to spend $20 million on a single training pass of one model. And we know that there are significant gaps that can't be closed without some fundamental shift in the approach, but because current deep learning models are miles better than the competitors, it's not feasible for most people to give up those gains to focus on something different that might have longer term payoffs. By sheer volume of research, that's an unpopular opinion, but within the field, I haven't really said much that would be objectionable to a lot of people either. For a truly unpopular opinion in the broader field of CS and software engineering, I think the state of software development is worse today than it was in the 1980s. Prior to that point, programming operated a bit more like an art form. It wasn't so much that people consciously thought of it that way. It was, I think, more a combination of a much smaller group of people doing it combined with a lack of conscious effort to frame the problem any other way. Good code was judged in similar ways as a good novel. A writer you love may have a great facility for poetic phrasing, and that's the thing you like. That's hard to quantify though, and I think code has a similar quality. As software engineering became more of a separate discipline that was focused on metrics like code reuse, it put objective-looking metrics in place of what had previously been a much more aesthetic process of judging code quality. And I'm not sure if I think the metrics were just bad or whether the failure was in not balancing optimizing for them against something else, but either way, programming got worse both in process and result. Give me a program written in the 80s with no thoughts at all toward code reuse, design patterns, dependency injection, unit test coverage, mocks, and all the other ostensibly great things about modern software development. If that code was written by a good programmer who had solid aesthetic judgements about how his code should be structured and written, it will be easier to work on, more bug free, faster, etc., than almost any software written today on the best engineering principles we've been able to come up with in the last 30 years. And if it were written by a bad programmer, it would be bad, but it would be more obviously bad than the average "modern" codebase.
1
6,776
1.121951
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
iveud6r
ivfyz8k
1,667,828,186
1,667,844,890
31
46
Lots in education, somehow, still think that schooling is primarily a psychological process in which social forces don't matter. Similarly, Theories and approaches, especially in contemporary neoliberal america, get stripped of their original social and political commitments. I saw a syllabus for a course on Critical Pedagogy and it didnt have a single reading by Freire or any other progressive. Critical Literacy gets transformed into "Critical Thinking"
English literature. My unpopular opinion is that reviewers/editors need to give more attention to language in articles. I’m finding it harder to read/enjoy criticism due to so many buzzwords being thrown about and misused. Get to the point and be concise! Prove your intellect by directly presenting your ideas rather than relying on flowery language.
0
16,704
1.483871
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfyz8k
ivfena9
1,667,844,890
1,667,837,000
46
29
English literature. My unpopular opinion is that reviewers/editors need to give more attention to language in articles. I’m finding it harder to read/enjoy criticism due to so many buzzwords being thrown about and misused. Get to the point and be concise! Prove your intellect by directly presenting your ideas rather than relying on flowery language.
Neuroscience: There is no free will.
1
7,890
1.586207
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfi2ex
ivfyz8k
1,667,838,362
1,667,844,890
36
46
That studies of intelligence (as in the activities of intelligence agencies, not human or animal intellect) should be properly viewed a sub-field of history because its occasional broader theoretical claims tend to be deeply suspect or so obvious that they offer very little insight. I’m ok with this, personally, but lots within the discipline see it otherwise.
English literature. My unpopular opinion is that reviewers/editors need to give more attention to language in articles. I’m finding it harder to read/enjoy criticism due to so many buzzwords being thrown about and misused. Get to the point and be concise! Prove your intellect by directly presenting your ideas rather than relying on flowery language.
0
6,528
1.277778
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfyz8k
ivfkric
1,667,844,890
1,667,839,428
46
28
English literature. My unpopular opinion is that reviewers/editors need to give more attention to language in articles. I’m finding it harder to read/enjoy criticism due to so many buzzwords being thrown about and misused. Get to the point and be concise! Prove your intellect by directly presenting your ideas rather than relying on flowery language.
We all talk a good game about null findings and replication, but it's thankless and minimally funded work. People kinda care, but only when somebody else does it.
1
5,462
1.642857
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfyz8k
ivfl10y
1,667,844,890
1,667,839,532
46
29
English literature. My unpopular opinion is that reviewers/editors need to give more attention to language in articles. I’m finding it harder to read/enjoy criticism due to so many buzzwords being thrown about and misused. Get to the point and be concise! Prove your intellect by directly presenting your ideas rather than relying on flowery language.
Sometimes I think that philosophy should turn all of the classic stuff --- everything from Socrates and Plato to (oh) Nietzsche and Russell --- over to history departments. I think this would be better for philosophy in the long run, but mostly I don't think we can be trusted with it.
1
5,358
1.586207
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfyz8k
ivf10s1
1,667,844,890
1,667,831,300
46
26
English literature. My unpopular opinion is that reviewers/editors need to give more attention to language in articles. I’m finding it harder to read/enjoy criticism due to so many buzzwords being thrown about and misused. Get to the point and be concise! Prove your intellect by directly presenting your ideas rather than relying on flowery language.
Computational chemistry, molecular dynamics: You can run a bunch of methods with a bunch of target properties on a single dataset and find "something". The problem is that often the size of the dataset should increase the more properties you study. In other words, you are more likely to see a fluke with a medium dataset if you use a lot of approaches. To counter this issue (ie hacking) in clinical trials Registered Reports have been introduced.
1
13,590
1.769231
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfd2kp
ivfyz8k
1,667,836,370
1,667,844,890
24
46
Organization Studies/Science (yes, it matters, and i used to be active at the intersection). I'm no longer active as a researcher, luckily. Not only is most research utterly irrelevant for people managing organizations, I've come to find it increasingly less important what people managing organization need or want. Fuck 'm.
English literature. My unpopular opinion is that reviewers/editors need to give more attention to language in articles. I’m finding it harder to read/enjoy criticism due to so many buzzwords being thrown about and misused. Get to the point and be concise! Prove your intellect by directly presenting your ideas rather than relying on flowery language.
0
8,520
1.916667
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfg4n4
ivfyz8k
1,667,837,592
1,667,844,890
28
46
History: there's a *long*-standing insistence in the field that we need to be "understandable" to the broad public. Overly-academic writing is thus "bad", and we should all be striving to popularize our work and our field as much as we can through social media, popular history writing, etc. I'm sorry, but History has long been far too specialized for that to be truly successful. We are building on generations upon generations of scholarship, while the public just occasionally watches a Ken Burns documentary at best... No one without a PhD in History is going to understand *anything* about true cutting-edge historical scholarship. No amount of social media posting, no amount of dumbing it down, could ever begin to distill the *thousands* of books in my subfield that I needed to fully understand just to *start* my own research. Sure, Historians can offer "corrections" to the most gross misinterpretations... EDIT: and yes, we can teach intro and advanced classes, and publish popularizations of our material. And that's good! But, *like every other professional field, from astrophysics to microbiology*, our serious work--our scholarship--is too specialized and technically-sophisticated to be understood by the uneducated masses or even by the chattering classes. (or even, truth be told, by other fields. The number of times I've encountered a mathematician or physicist who thinks that they know *anything* about my field--and eventry to lecture *me* on it!--is just way too many times.)
English literature. My unpopular opinion is that reviewers/editors need to give more attention to language in articles. I’m finding it harder to read/enjoy criticism due to so many buzzwords being thrown about and misused. Get to the point and be concise! Prove your intellect by directly presenting your ideas rather than relying on flowery language.
0
7,298
1.642857
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfhfxd
iveud6r
1,667,838,114
1,667,828,186
41
31
Computer Scientist here. My main research area is machine learning, and my sort of unpopular opinion is that deep learning isn't very interesting and is kind of a dead end. It's been the only thing getting any oxygen for about 15 years now, and it's still providing a lot of practical advancements, but all those advancements are being gained by just throwing money at it. To play at all in the space requires you to work for one of half a dozen companies that can afford to spend $20 million on a single training pass of one model. And we know that there are significant gaps that can't be closed without some fundamental shift in the approach, but because current deep learning models are miles better than the competitors, it's not feasible for most people to give up those gains to focus on something different that might have longer term payoffs. By sheer volume of research, that's an unpopular opinion, but within the field, I haven't really said much that would be objectionable to a lot of people either. For a truly unpopular opinion in the broader field of CS and software engineering, I think the state of software development is worse today than it was in the 1980s. Prior to that point, programming operated a bit more like an art form. It wasn't so much that people consciously thought of it that way. It was, I think, more a combination of a much smaller group of people doing it combined with a lack of conscious effort to frame the problem any other way. Good code was judged in similar ways as a good novel. A writer you love may have a great facility for poetic phrasing, and that's the thing you like. That's hard to quantify though, and I think code has a similar quality. As software engineering became more of a separate discipline that was focused on metrics like code reuse, it put objective-looking metrics in place of what had previously been a much more aesthetic process of judging code quality. And I'm not sure if I think the metrics were just bad or whether the failure was in not balancing optimizing for them against something else, but either way, programming got worse both in process and result. Give me a program written in the 80s with no thoughts at all toward code reuse, design patterns, dependency injection, unit test coverage, mocks, and all the other ostensibly great things about modern software development. If that code was written by a good programmer who had solid aesthetic judgements about how his code should be structured and written, it will be easier to work on, more bug free, faster, etc., than almost any software written today on the best engineering principles we've been able to come up with in the last 30 years. And if it were written by a bad programmer, it would be bad, but it would be more obviously bad than the average "modern" codebase.
Lots in education, somehow, still think that schooling is primarily a psychological process in which social forces don't matter. Similarly, Theories and approaches, especially in contemporary neoliberal america, get stripped of their original social and political commitments. I saw a syllabus for a course on Critical Pedagogy and it didnt have a single reading by Freire or any other progressive. Critical Literacy gets transformed into "Critical Thinking"
1
9,928
1.322581
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfena9
ivfhfxd
1,667,837,000
1,667,838,114
29
41
Neuroscience: There is no free will.
Computer Scientist here. My main research area is machine learning, and my sort of unpopular opinion is that deep learning isn't very interesting and is kind of a dead end. It's been the only thing getting any oxygen for about 15 years now, and it's still providing a lot of practical advancements, but all those advancements are being gained by just throwing money at it. To play at all in the space requires you to work for one of half a dozen companies that can afford to spend $20 million on a single training pass of one model. And we know that there are significant gaps that can't be closed without some fundamental shift in the approach, but because current deep learning models are miles better than the competitors, it's not feasible for most people to give up those gains to focus on something different that might have longer term payoffs. By sheer volume of research, that's an unpopular opinion, but within the field, I haven't really said much that would be objectionable to a lot of people either. For a truly unpopular opinion in the broader field of CS and software engineering, I think the state of software development is worse today than it was in the 1980s. Prior to that point, programming operated a bit more like an art form. It wasn't so much that people consciously thought of it that way. It was, I think, more a combination of a much smaller group of people doing it combined with a lack of conscious effort to frame the problem any other way. Good code was judged in similar ways as a good novel. A writer you love may have a great facility for poetic phrasing, and that's the thing you like. That's hard to quantify though, and I think code has a similar quality. As software engineering became more of a separate discipline that was focused on metrics like code reuse, it put objective-looking metrics in place of what had previously been a much more aesthetic process of judging code quality. And I'm not sure if I think the metrics were just bad or whether the failure was in not balancing optimizing for them against something else, but either way, programming got worse both in process and result. Give me a program written in the 80s with no thoughts at all toward code reuse, design patterns, dependency injection, unit test coverage, mocks, and all the other ostensibly great things about modern software development. If that code was written by a good programmer who had solid aesthetic judgements about how his code should be structured and written, it will be easier to work on, more bug free, faster, etc., than almost any software written today on the best engineering principles we've been able to come up with in the last 30 years. And if it were written by a bad programmer, it would be bad, but it would be more obviously bad than the average "modern" codebase.
0
1,114
1.413793
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfhfxd
ivf10s1
1,667,838,114
1,667,831,300
41
26
Computer Scientist here. My main research area is machine learning, and my sort of unpopular opinion is that deep learning isn't very interesting and is kind of a dead end. It's been the only thing getting any oxygen for about 15 years now, and it's still providing a lot of practical advancements, but all those advancements are being gained by just throwing money at it. To play at all in the space requires you to work for one of half a dozen companies that can afford to spend $20 million on a single training pass of one model. And we know that there are significant gaps that can't be closed without some fundamental shift in the approach, but because current deep learning models are miles better than the competitors, it's not feasible for most people to give up those gains to focus on something different that might have longer term payoffs. By sheer volume of research, that's an unpopular opinion, but within the field, I haven't really said much that would be objectionable to a lot of people either. For a truly unpopular opinion in the broader field of CS and software engineering, I think the state of software development is worse today than it was in the 1980s. Prior to that point, programming operated a bit more like an art form. It wasn't so much that people consciously thought of it that way. It was, I think, more a combination of a much smaller group of people doing it combined with a lack of conscious effort to frame the problem any other way. Good code was judged in similar ways as a good novel. A writer you love may have a great facility for poetic phrasing, and that's the thing you like. That's hard to quantify though, and I think code has a similar quality. As software engineering became more of a separate discipline that was focused on metrics like code reuse, it put objective-looking metrics in place of what had previously been a much more aesthetic process of judging code quality. And I'm not sure if I think the metrics were just bad or whether the failure was in not balancing optimizing for them against something else, but either way, programming got worse both in process and result. Give me a program written in the 80s with no thoughts at all toward code reuse, design patterns, dependency injection, unit test coverage, mocks, and all the other ostensibly great things about modern software development. If that code was written by a good programmer who had solid aesthetic judgements about how his code should be structured and written, it will be easier to work on, more bug free, faster, etc., than almost any software written today on the best engineering principles we've been able to come up with in the last 30 years. And if it were written by a bad programmer, it would be bad, but it would be more obviously bad than the average "modern" codebase.
Computational chemistry, molecular dynamics: You can run a bunch of methods with a bunch of target properties on a single dataset and find "something". The problem is that often the size of the dataset should increase the more properties you study. In other words, you are more likely to see a fluke with a medium dataset if you use a lot of approaches. To counter this issue (ie hacking) in clinical trials Registered Reports have been introduced.
1
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yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfhfxd
ivfd2kp
1,667,838,114
1,667,836,370
41
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Computer Scientist here. My main research area is machine learning, and my sort of unpopular opinion is that deep learning isn't very interesting and is kind of a dead end. It's been the only thing getting any oxygen for about 15 years now, and it's still providing a lot of practical advancements, but all those advancements are being gained by just throwing money at it. To play at all in the space requires you to work for one of half a dozen companies that can afford to spend $20 million on a single training pass of one model. And we know that there are significant gaps that can't be closed without some fundamental shift in the approach, but because current deep learning models are miles better than the competitors, it's not feasible for most people to give up those gains to focus on something different that might have longer term payoffs. By sheer volume of research, that's an unpopular opinion, but within the field, I haven't really said much that would be objectionable to a lot of people either. For a truly unpopular opinion in the broader field of CS and software engineering, I think the state of software development is worse today than it was in the 1980s. Prior to that point, programming operated a bit more like an art form. It wasn't so much that people consciously thought of it that way. It was, I think, more a combination of a much smaller group of people doing it combined with a lack of conscious effort to frame the problem any other way. Good code was judged in similar ways as a good novel. A writer you love may have a great facility for poetic phrasing, and that's the thing you like. That's hard to quantify though, and I think code has a similar quality. As software engineering became more of a separate discipline that was focused on metrics like code reuse, it put objective-looking metrics in place of what had previously been a much more aesthetic process of judging code quality. And I'm not sure if I think the metrics were just bad or whether the failure was in not balancing optimizing for them against something else, but either way, programming got worse both in process and result. Give me a program written in the 80s with no thoughts at all toward code reuse, design patterns, dependency injection, unit test coverage, mocks, and all the other ostensibly great things about modern software development. If that code was written by a good programmer who had solid aesthetic judgements about how his code should be structured and written, it will be easier to work on, more bug free, faster, etc., than almost any software written today on the best engineering principles we've been able to come up with in the last 30 years. And if it were written by a bad programmer, it would be bad, but it would be more obviously bad than the average "modern" codebase.
Organization Studies/Science (yes, it matters, and i used to be active at the intersection). I'm no longer active as a researcher, luckily. Not only is most research utterly irrelevant for people managing organizations, I've come to find it increasingly less important what people managing organization need or want. Fuck 'm.
1
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yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfhfxd
ivfg4n4
1,667,838,114
1,667,837,592
41
28
Computer Scientist here. My main research area is machine learning, and my sort of unpopular opinion is that deep learning isn't very interesting and is kind of a dead end. It's been the only thing getting any oxygen for about 15 years now, and it's still providing a lot of practical advancements, but all those advancements are being gained by just throwing money at it. To play at all in the space requires you to work for one of half a dozen companies that can afford to spend $20 million on a single training pass of one model. And we know that there are significant gaps that can't be closed without some fundamental shift in the approach, but because current deep learning models are miles better than the competitors, it's not feasible for most people to give up those gains to focus on something different that might have longer term payoffs. By sheer volume of research, that's an unpopular opinion, but within the field, I haven't really said much that would be objectionable to a lot of people either. For a truly unpopular opinion in the broader field of CS and software engineering, I think the state of software development is worse today than it was in the 1980s. Prior to that point, programming operated a bit more like an art form. It wasn't so much that people consciously thought of it that way. It was, I think, more a combination of a much smaller group of people doing it combined with a lack of conscious effort to frame the problem any other way. Good code was judged in similar ways as a good novel. A writer you love may have a great facility for poetic phrasing, and that's the thing you like. That's hard to quantify though, and I think code has a similar quality. As software engineering became more of a separate discipline that was focused on metrics like code reuse, it put objective-looking metrics in place of what had previously been a much more aesthetic process of judging code quality. And I'm not sure if I think the metrics were just bad or whether the failure was in not balancing optimizing for them against something else, but either way, programming got worse both in process and result. Give me a program written in the 80s with no thoughts at all toward code reuse, design patterns, dependency injection, unit test coverage, mocks, and all the other ostensibly great things about modern software development. If that code was written by a good programmer who had solid aesthetic judgements about how his code should be structured and written, it will be easier to work on, more bug free, faster, etc., than almost any software written today on the best engineering principles we've been able to come up with in the last 30 years. And if it were written by a bad programmer, it would be bad, but it would be more obviously bad than the average "modern" codebase.
History: there's a *long*-standing insistence in the field that we need to be "understandable" to the broad public. Overly-academic writing is thus "bad", and we should all be striving to popularize our work and our field as much as we can through social media, popular history writing, etc. I'm sorry, but History has long been far too specialized for that to be truly successful. We are building on generations upon generations of scholarship, while the public just occasionally watches a Ken Burns documentary at best... No one without a PhD in History is going to understand *anything* about true cutting-edge historical scholarship. No amount of social media posting, no amount of dumbing it down, could ever begin to distill the *thousands* of books in my subfield that I needed to fully understand just to *start* my own research. Sure, Historians can offer "corrections" to the most gross misinterpretations... EDIT: and yes, we can teach intro and advanced classes, and publish popularizations of our material. And that's good! But, *like every other professional field, from astrophysics to microbiology*, our serious work--our scholarship--is too specialized and technically-sophisticated to be understood by the uneducated masses or even by the chattering classes. (or even, truth be told, by other fields. The number of times I've encountered a mathematician or physicist who thinks that they know *anything* about my field--and eventry to lecture *me* on it!--is just way too many times.)
1
522
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yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfi2ex
iveud6r
1,667,838,362
1,667,828,186
36
31
That studies of intelligence (as in the activities of intelligence agencies, not human or animal intellect) should be properly viewed a sub-field of history because its occasional broader theoretical claims tend to be deeply suspect or so obvious that they offer very little insight. I’m ok with this, personally, but lots within the discipline see it otherwise.
Lots in education, somehow, still think that schooling is primarily a psychological process in which social forces don't matter. Similarly, Theories and approaches, especially in contemporary neoliberal america, get stripped of their original social and political commitments. I saw a syllabus for a course on Critical Pedagogy and it didnt have a single reading by Freire or any other progressive. Critical Literacy gets transformed into "Critical Thinking"
1
10,176
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yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfi2ex
ivfena9
1,667,838,362
1,667,837,000
36
29
That studies of intelligence (as in the activities of intelligence agencies, not human or animal intellect) should be properly viewed a sub-field of history because its occasional broader theoretical claims tend to be deeply suspect or so obvious that they offer very little insight. I’m ok with this, personally, but lots within the discipline see it otherwise.
Neuroscience: There is no free will.
1
1,362
1.241379
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivf10s1
ivfena9
1,667,831,300
1,667,837,000
26
29
Computational chemistry, molecular dynamics: You can run a bunch of methods with a bunch of target properties on a single dataset and find "something". The problem is that often the size of the dataset should increase the more properties you study. In other words, you are more likely to see a fluke with a medium dataset if you use a lot of approaches. To counter this issue (ie hacking) in clinical trials Registered Reports have been introduced.
Neuroscience: There is no free will.
0
5,700
1.115385
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfena9
ivfd2kp
1,667,837,000
1,667,836,370
29
24
Neuroscience: There is no free will.
Organization Studies/Science (yes, it matters, and i used to be active at the intersection). I'm no longer active as a researcher, luckily. Not only is most research utterly irrelevant for people managing organizations, I've come to find it increasingly less important what people managing organization need or want. Fuck 'm.
1
630
1.208333
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfi2ex
ivf10s1
1,667,838,362
1,667,831,300
36
26
That studies of intelligence (as in the activities of intelligence agencies, not human or animal intellect) should be properly viewed a sub-field of history because its occasional broader theoretical claims tend to be deeply suspect or so obvious that they offer very little insight. I’m ok with this, personally, but lots within the discipline see it otherwise.
Computational chemistry, molecular dynamics: You can run a bunch of methods with a bunch of target properties on a single dataset and find "something". The problem is that often the size of the dataset should increase the more properties you study. In other words, you are more likely to see a fluke with a medium dataset if you use a lot of approaches. To counter this issue (ie hacking) in clinical trials Registered Reports have been introduced.
1
7,062
1.384615
yolicw
askacademia_train
0.97
What's your unpopular opinion about your field? Title.
ivfd2kp
ivfi2ex
1,667,836,370
1,667,838,362
24
36
Organization Studies/Science (yes, it matters, and i used to be active at the intersection). I'm no longer active as a researcher, luckily. Not only is most research utterly irrelevant for people managing organizations, I've come to find it increasingly less important what people managing organization need or want. Fuck 'm.
That studies of intelligence (as in the activities of intelligence agencies, not human or animal intellect) should be properly viewed a sub-field of history because its occasional broader theoretical claims tend to be deeply suspect or so obvious that they offer very little insight. I’m ok with this, personally, but lots within the discipline see it otherwise.
0
1,992
1.5