|
People don't investigate things like that, because, frankly, no one cares. Nor should they. If your computer is acting funny, and you find out a spider has made a nest inside it, and it works fine once you clear out the spider nest, would you then decide to determine exactly why that spider nest, in that place, causes the exact problems you observed? No, of course not. Because that's not an interesting question. Computers are complicated machines, and they can break in lots of different ways, most of which are not very interesting in their details. Similarly, suppose you study cultured cells (which are notoriously finicky), and you want to compare what the cells do in the presence of drug X vs control. But at first, you find that all of your control cells die. And eventually you find out that if you use brand X of bottled water vs tap water, the control cells thrive. Are you seriously proposing that you should then drop all work on drug X, and get to work determining exactly what is up with the tap water in your town? I mean, maybe that would be a fruitful research avenue, if you're worried that the tap water isn't safe for human consumption, or you think that there's something interesting about exactly how the tap water is killing your control cells. But most of the time, investigating the tap water would be an expensive distraction from the question you actually want to answer. And most scientists, I think, would (reasonably) decide to get on with investigating the effects of drug X on their cells, and not worry too much about precisely why the tap water killed the control cells. And I don't think there's anything wrong with that. Life is short, and you have to choose your questions carefully. |
I do understand that you have a limited amount of time, and can't just go after everything, but when something happens in science, it needs to be documented. Yeah, maybe someone else should investigate, but someone should. Maybe that particular phenomena that lead to the water influencing your result will give you knowledge about cell metabolism. Who knows? If it has that much of an effect on cell growth that you need to deal with it, it's already more active than a lot of compounds we try out, anyway...
To go back to the computer analogy, it feels like my program is bugged, and to debug it I'm changing variables names (which as far as I know shouldn't matter), and then the code magically works again. Sure, some days, I'll go "Ok, compiler magic, got it", but most days I'd be pretty intrigued, and I'd look into it, because yeah, I might just have found a GCC bug.
I agree, no one cares, but I did. I don't know what I don't know yet, and I don't want to presume anything. The tap water thing might actually lead us to solid models which would explain why tap water breaks the experiment. That's why I really think we should start a movement of publishing everything, and trying to deal with simpler models/systems we do understand before going up to models with so many unknowns that the results are basically a dice roll.