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> ... what mathematicians can deliver to genomics that is special and unique, is the ability to not only generalize, but to do so “correctly”. I think this isn't really special or unique to mathematics. Certainly it's something that some mathematicians work hard to be good at, but many great mathematicians never play this game. Look at like Terry Tao, the man is undoubtedly one of the (if not the) greatest living mathematician, but IMO his best work tends to be these crazy mind-bending proofs or developments within specific areas of math. He's not a Grothendieck or a Hilbert who reorganizes concepts in elucidating ways or creates powerful generalizations. This isn't a knock on Tao, it's just pointing out that research fields are broad and require different skillsets. In terms of hard science it's IMO kind of the difference between a brilliant theorist and a brilliant experimentalist. Taking that comparison one step further, biology also has its theoreticians and its experimentalists. Being a skilled theoretician, understanding how to organize abstract concepts to the right level of generality, is definitely something that math can help you improve at, but it in no way is limited to mathematics. For example, Stephen Jay Gould was IMO brilliant at operating abstractly, but he had no formal mathematical training I'm aware of. Critical thought belongs to every field, even ones outside of research science (ex. Law, Philosophy). > But wouldn’t it be better if mathematicians proved they are serious about biology and biologists truly experimented with mathematics? For the reasons above, this isn't clear to me. Does a first-year Ecology PhD really need to think critically about Hilbert spaces? They might find it to be a fun exercise, and I could see how they could get benefits from it, but they could get similar benefits from like any advanced philosophy course, IMO. I'm all for collaboration when it benefits both fields, but collaboration for collaboration's sake seems like a time sink without an obvious impact. caveat: this is all said 10 years after the post was written, I do think the cultural divide the author talks about has closed somewhat since writing, so maybe this arrangement is now just more palatable to me. |