|
|
|
|
|
by Jun8
5116 days ago
|
|
I disagree. Take the education reform problem (in the US). A number of solutions have been proposed, which one should we implement, or should we come up with a new one? Are teachers' ratings completely bogus, as some claim, or can they be used to rate them. People want answers, you can't just give up. Not everybody can close shop and work on other, more well-defined problems because these problems need to be solved, or lacking that, addressed. You have to come up with a methodology. Now, you may not want to call it "science" but that doesn't make the results meaningless. Similar problems that require a combination of statistics, biology, psychology, ethics, and politics: * Should universities stop affirmative action, should they stop reverse affirmative action for Asians? * Should we (like Norway) enact laws that require a certain percentage of women on company boards? * Should there be gender equality (in the sense of numbers) in almost all professions? Are men (or women) more suitable for certain jobs? etc., I'm sure you can think of many more. |
|
I think you're completely wrong about education. The science is already there. We have empirical evidence on ways to improve it. The problems with education are almost all political... but this thread isn't really about education, though is it? From reading your posts, it seems like you really want this thread to be a battle over education and if I had to guess I'd say that Feynman's insightful almost throwaway comment on education really struck a nerve.
> Now, you may not want to call it "science" but that doesn't make the results meaningless.
If you're not doing good science, then your results will likely only be indirectly useful. The last 50 years of increasing education expenditures without showing any results speaks volumes about what a tragedy having an attitude like yours is. Maybe if someone had listened to Feynman in 1974 and quickly eliminated any educational expenditures that didn't produce results, we wouldn't be having this argument.