"... you end up with a very small circle inside a much larger circle and it looks silly."
I dunno, I like Polo mints *g*. More to the point, a fuzzy line inside a polo mint /tastes/ weird. There are no hard lines, and what lines there are (someone has to make categories otherwise we might as well have one heap on the floor labelled 'books' -- oh, wait, that /is/ my house!) are largely arbitrary and subjective. Benford claims that Asimov had a similar view to Benford about Fantasy, but Asimov wrote the stuff -- well thought out and reasoned fantasy, admittedly. And I know a number of 'hard' SF fans who claim that anything with FTL travel or communication is fantasy (because 'obviously' Einstein had a line to Absolute Truth(tm)) and refuse to read it. So much for B, B and B (as well as A, C and H).
As Lynch said, there is indeed a decrease in the number of scientists in the next generations, but it's the fault of the education system (he was talking about the US, it's equally true here). I was looking at the UKC website (where I got my degree) and the computing courses seem to be all about application writing these days, none of the actual science in Computer Science is evident. If the other sciences have been similarly dumbed down then we are training technicians, not scientists. And if the Chinese or whoever are training scientists I say good for them!
no subject
Date: 2005-12-13 05:33 pm (UTC)I dunno, I like Polo mints *g*. More to the point, a fuzzy line inside a polo mint /tastes/ weird. There are no hard lines, and what lines there are (someone has to make categories otherwise we might as well have one heap on the floor labelled 'books' -- oh, wait, that /is/ my house!) are largely arbitrary and subjective. Benford claims that Asimov had a similar view to Benford about Fantasy, but Asimov wrote the stuff -- well thought out and reasoned fantasy, admittedly. And I know a number of 'hard' SF fans who claim that anything with FTL travel or communication is fantasy (because 'obviously' Einstein had a line to Absolute Truth(tm)) and refuse to read it. So much for B, B and B (as well as A, C and H).
As Lynch said, there is indeed a decrease in the number of scientists in the next generations, but it's the fault of the education system (he was talking about the US, it's equally true here). I was looking at the UKC website (where I got my degree) and the computing courses seem to be all about application writing these days, none of the actual science in Computer Science is evident. If the other sciences have been similarly dumbed down then we are training technicians, not scientists. And if the Chinese or whoever are training scientists I say good for them!