|
|
|
|
|
by ly3xqhl8g9
1060 days ago
|
|
Sure, it doesn't spread down to 1901, but the uptick started around 1970s [1]. Anyway, my main rant was about the inefficiency of giving awards to "lone geniuses", at most three, of expecting said "lone wolves" to exist in the first place, and then comes the discussion if the wolves are male or not. Unfortunately it got derailed into talking about pseudoscientific scalars such as IQ and sex binaries. [1] "large scale changes began around the 1970s", https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_STEM_fields |
|
And the trend of aging winners continues as research become more complex and specialized and therefore requires more experience. The time between theory and the practical discovery (Nobel prizes are only for the latter) increase as experiments become more complex too. So much that it may become difficult for theorists to get a Nobel in their lifetime. That LK99 thing, if real, is more the exception than the rule.