Paul Pietroski sent me this nice link on
what it is to do original research. It eloquently expresses thoughts similar to
those that I posted (here) on the
same topic a while ago. I thought you might find the discussion interesting. To
me, it rings true. Let me add a few stray thoughts (but read the linked piece,
it’s put better there).
There are at least three problems with doing original
research.
First, the skills that got you to the point of doing it
(usually in 2nd year grad school) differ from those that will help
you to do it well. Earlier skills involve mastering a technology that has been
road tested against understood problems, your job being to prove that you can
answer the test questions without looking at the back of the book. But, and
this is key, there is a back of the book
and there are answers there. This is
not the case when working on a new problem.
Second, a good chunk of doing original work consists in
finding a good question to ask. In other words, part of the transition to being
a researcher is shifting from being a hot shot question answerer to being a
fertile question poser (not to be confused with the often superficially similar
poseur). Great researchers know how to ask the right questions. Indeed, the
questions if good always outlive the answers, which, if the question is really
novel, will be replaced by better answers pretty rapidly. What makes a question
good? Well in part, it's a little like porn, you know it when you see it. But
there are some surface properties of note: Good questions must be worth
answering. Good questions must be answerable. Really good questions lead to
others that meet the two criteria above. If all of this sounds vague, well it
is. And that’s the problem with original research.
Third, and this is the point of the first paper linked to
above; you never know enough to answer the good questions. This can make you
feel dumb and inadequate and scared and feel like your wasting your time and
consider a change in career or inspire you to clean your desk, office,
apartment, building, accessible public areas, go to the gym, movies, overeat,
diet, scream, go into a depressive shut down, yell at your loved ones, kick
your dog… Or, it can, as Martin Schwartz expresses it, it can liberate you. In
his words:
That
realization, instead of being discouraging, was liberating. If our ignorance is
infinite, the only possible course of action is to muddle through as best we
can.
And, I would add, if the problem
is really hard, then there is nothing embarrassing about not being able to
crack it wide open and there are huge psychic rewards for being able to nudge
it forward even a little bit. In addition, again as Schwartz notes, there is
something exciting about having a problem of your very own. When it comes to your problem you are the world’s expert
on that topic (or at least one of the very very few experts). You are going
where no one has gone before and making up the rules as you go there. It can be a real rush, sort of like bungee
jumping with an untested cord.
There is at least one problem
however. Nobody is really prepared to do original research. Not only don’t you
know enough (ever) but there is no guarantee that you ever will. This I believe
is the final indignity of real research work. It’s so damn unfair. Hard work
need not be rewarded. Ingenuity may be nugatory. Perseverance may go
unrewarded. It’s hard and can succeed,
but it need not do so and you never
really know until the problem is cracked how well you are doing.[1] Schwartz again:
What
makes it difficult is that research is immersion in the unknown. We just don't
know what we're doing. We can't be sure whether we're asking the right question
or doing the right experiment until we get the answer or the result.
Admittedly, science is made harder by competition for grants and space in top
journals. But apart from all of that, doing significant research is
intrinsically hard and changing departmental, institutional or national
policies will not succeed in lessening its intrinsic difficulty.
So, new work is tough and it’s tough because it is new, which
also makes it exciting and scary. It requires imagination rather than mere
competence, it requires an ability to tolerate your own ignorance and it
requires a capacity to live with the realization that you may not get anywhere
despite your best efforts. Schwartz says
that we don’t really prepare our students for this in their training, and he
makes several reasonable suggestions about how to help our students become
“productively stupid.” His comments are both sane and humane. But I suspect
that in the end they will only be marginally effective. As he also notes, the
problem is that there is only so much one can do to “lessen its intrinsic
difficulty.”
That said let me suggest one more useful crutch. Though
research is tough, it need not be lonely. And even if it ends inconclusively,
it can be lots of fun along the way. One of the things that I have found
endlessly helpful is talking with fellow researchers. I love lunching with
colleagues and students, kibitzing with them, arguing with them, joking with
them, playing volleyball with them etc.
The pains of original work can be mitigated in part by the social
pleasures of an active research group. When students ask me what they can do to
push their work along I always suggest that they talk to their friends about it
over lunch, beer, gym. Have fun. Make jokes. Be irreverent. Laugh a lot. Argue.
Be silly. Talking about good ideas (and sometimes bad ones) can be very
enjoyable. And an infectious delight can often spur the imagination. And as
Schwartz rightly emphasizes, one’s imagination needs all the help it can get
given that most of the time if we are doing our jobs right we will be really really
clueless.
[1]
I suspect that this, even more than material advancement, is what tempts people
to cut corners. It’s not the desire to deceive, so much as the desire not to
fail. Here is a nice
discussion I found on various ways that this is done. The discussion focuses on
model building and the ways stats can fudge matters, but the maneuvers and
temptations described circulate very widely. I admit that they have winked at
me more than once and I am not confident that I’ve always avoided yielding.
Boy, this is embarrassing. I just re-read the earlier post I linked to and realize that it discussed the very same piece that Paul sent to me. There it is, early onset forgetfulness. At any rate, I am happy to report that I was more or less consistent in my reactions to the piece over about a period of 12 months. At any rate, the Schwartz piece is very good and contains useful comments about life as a professional researcher. Take a look. Sorry for the duplication.
ReplyDeleteThat's another good feature of blogs -- they're happy to publish replications.
ReplyDelete