• flora_explora@beehaw.org
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    9 months ago

    Oof, I only read a third of the article until the authors starts talking about tech clusters in detail. But it seems so weird to me how so many economically focused people seem to have a very strong tunnel vision and see the world only in terms of economic growth and nothing else. Like, in the whole introduction there is no mention at all of the environment and how we have already more than surpassed its limits in many ways. How the global north’s growth heavily relies on exploiting the people and the environment of the global south. Of course there was a lot more economic growth in Europe and the US when they could depend on colonialism and slavery. What I want to say is that, while the proposed question might be interesting, not even considering these factors is a huge oversight. I don’t get how these fans of capitalism can understand so little of how it works. Like those economy “experts” who have been praising neoliberalism as benefitting everyone for ages but have made most people’s lives miserable.

    • mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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      9 months ago

      Well… I think I just see them as two separate issues. Your point is 100% valid but I’m not sure it undoes any of the argument about progress on fundamental research; I just see them as tangential issues.

      Like, we’re still exploiting people and the environment of the global south. That didn’t go away (in fact we arguably got more efficient at it as the systems became more refined and less go-in-with-gunboats brute force). But for some reason the progress in base research did go away, and he’s trying to get to the reasons why that happened. If we’d actually undone colonialism but lost progress in basic research as a consequence of that then yes; but I don’t think that’s how it happened.

      The point that, he shouldn’t be thinking only of good scientific progress in the wealthy sector of the first world and everyone else isn’t real important, yes I 100% agree with. I also think it’s not strictly an either-or though – the same systems that are screwing a highly educated person in Idaho who can’t get funding for their good idea, are the same systems screwing the Honduran farmer. If getting to the reasons behind (a) are going to lead to shedding any amount of light on (b) via some further investigation then I’d be in favor of that.

      • flora_explora@beehaw.org
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        9 months ago

        Well, I would love to talk about fundamental research. But the author of the article actually conflates research and economical growth. That’s why I was discussing the problems that come up when you only focus on economic growth. Especially fundamental research is not expected to reliably generate economic benefits. That’s the whole point of it.

        I think that the author actually gave the answer, or at least a more compelling one, in the article itself: any research and especially fundamental research gets harder the more you already know. We already plucked all the low- and medium-hanging fruits. Now we need to wrestle more and more with much harder niche problems often on much smaller or bigger scale (transistors on atom level vs huge climate models).

        The author may also have conflated research with its economic output out of a confusion. In my view, the opposite is the case. Research is more and more under capitalist pressure to produce output, to compete with other researchers and to publish whatever you can in record time. This is detrimental to research, as this competition leads to many more papers that are nonsensical or that only lead to tiny progressions. No one has time to actually research anything in depth because you have to publish right away and have to persuade investors that your research is the next breakthrough. Under heavy competition, researchers then begin to steal findings from each other or try to cheat in some other way. The supposed room-temperature superconducter finding last year was such a case where they tried to publish their findings before the rest of the team. Had they spend just more time researching, they may have found that it actually wasn’t a superconducter. Weren’t they under such a financial pressure, they wouldn’t even had the incentive to publish this finding. And then there are all these predatory journals that thrive under capitalist pressure.

        This system is rotten. Research does not do well under capitalism. Maybe that’s what the author tried to say as well? I doubt it but I haven’t read the last part.

        • mozz@mbin.grits.devOP
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          9 months ago

          But the author of the article actually conflates research and economical growth. That’s why I was discussing the problems that come up when you only focus on economic growth.

          What? It looks to me like the article is focusing almost exclusively on research, not on economic growth. There’s some stuff in the first two paragraphs about setting the economic context, and a passing mention much later of academic inequality seeming to produce a corresponding economic inequality, but as far as I can tell, the main thrust of his point is very much focused on the research side and independent from anything it means on the economic side. Where is he talking in any depth about economics?