Carey wrote:
A lot of art, music, and engineering (oddly enough) schools are utterly failing at their jobs now because the faculty think that the philosophy of what they're teaching the students is more important than the technical skills.
Can you give an example? Philosophy *is* questioning presuppositions.
I don't think that's a bad thing. In our historical phase I don't think it's
surprising that there's a lot of questioning going on, warranted or not.[/quote]
I should have called it rhetoric rather than philosophy. I used the term philosophy rather loosely. After all, I spent a big part of my life studying philosophy pretty seriously: I like to think of mathematics as philosophy where your assumptions all have to be true (except in the case of proof by contradiction / reduction ad absurdum, of course)
Acquaintances of mine have attended art schools that give marks predominantly for the 'message' of the piece, rather than the actual quality of the work. All the good (ie: professional) artists I personally know think that's BS; they make their art to see what it looks like, or because they're compelled, not because there's a message to get out. If they're trying to say something, they do it the more efficient way: with words! The students who end up succeeding later do it in spite of their schooling, as they end up having to teach themselves. The kids are going into 10-15K+ of debt per year to learn to paint/sculpt/etc, not to be prosthelytized to!
The engineering department here often gives more marks for 'improvements to initial design' rather than the quality of the final design. In other words, it doesn't matter if you design something good or not, it just matters if it's better than your first idea. Problem: students who make good solutions need to make up poor solutions and then write up a false process of 'improving them' to their original solutions or they'll get poor marks! It's A for Effort rather than A for Effective. The way they look down on 'technicians' and therefore don't teach the kids any practical skills puts murderous intent into real engineers, as well, because they're once again released into the real world with a head full of 'what an engineer is/should be' and no ability to execute.
I'm not saying there isn't a place for meta-analysis in education, but in a skills-based program it should be getting an order of magnitude less attention than the actual 'how to do this work' part. It's the 'the right answer is the one that agrees with the prof' approach to English essays taken to the extreme. There's a stark contrast to that sort of thinking in the science departments I've been in, where I've heard profs grumble about a student being more or less a jack*** but admitting that they were talented and deserved credit. At the end of the day, it just ticks me off that these kids are putting years and a whole lot of money in and getting a lot more rhetoric and a lot less knowledge than they paid for.
Brevity is definitely
not my strong point.
Howard Klepper wrote:
Bob Garrish wrote:
Bob, I was responding to Filippo, and I don't think I was talking about engineering, especially if that's what you do when science is through. I don't get the point in your last sentence; if I learn something by any method, why can't I pass it on without forcing someone to retrace my steps? Or are you saying that the only way we actually can learn anything is by scientific method? That would be dubious. And Feynmann says that to do science, you should retrace your predecessor's steps as much as possible.
Polanyi? Different set of issues, IMO.
No-one would argue that a lot of the top builders clearly have learned something about what they're doing when it comes to wood selection and 'tuning' as it were, but with the exception of very few all they have to pass on is 'listen to as much wood as I have and you'll learn'. Anyone who learns something in a way such that they can pass on to another does science whether they know it or not. The better the science, the more they can pass on.
And Feynman is absolutely correct but in science we only need to retrace the steps that lead to answers, not the loops and backtracking that didn't produce anything. I can replicate Newton's experiments and gain that insight, but there's no value to me replicating the ones that didn't work nor the large quantity of banging of head against hard surface inherent in that process. That's in stark contrast to 'want to learn physics? here's a rock, teach yourself!'.
(I think he would have called it natural philosophy, but that would have really obfuscated the point

)