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Antihippodamus's avatar

A great article, but it starts with a wrong premise. Not all problems are either weak or strong-link problems. Some problems are "average level problems". That's where there is value in lifting the average quality. I think science is both a strong-link problem and an average-level problem. Science is a strong-link problem when you want large leaps forward in understanding of the world. That's the focus of the article. But in today's society science is also used to answer lots of small empirical questions in many different fields. It actually matters a great deal that the quality of that research is reasonably good. Its not quite a weak-link problem (although it is good to avoid outright frauds). I use research papers all the time for my work. It matters that the methods, data and theories get better and more rigorous over time. It also matters that scientific findings in the aggregate are trustwordy when they are used to guide important decisions.

I don't think my field is unique. A good friend of mine who is a doctor is constantly complaining that some of the research used to justify the prescription of some very common drugs is actually quite weak. Interestingly enough there are hundreds of papers and dozens of metastudies on those particular drugs, but still large uncertainties that could be solved with the right research design. This is something that really matters!

I don't think that this detracts from the overall point that the organisation of science today is broken. Whilst there certainly is constant improvement in some qualitative aspects, it seems to me that academia doesn't value the kind of rigorous and slightly boring empirical work that is actually usefull here and now. When I use empirical findings from research in my work, it is usually not what's the main focus of the papers. The main focus is usually some shiny new "advance" in the theory that often doesn't amount to much, but is the reason the paper gets published in a top journal. As a practitioner I would easily trade that for some more and better data. But assembeling data is hard and pretty unglamorous.

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Roger’s Bacon's avatar

Love this framing. I think of different sports to explain the concept - basketball tends towards strong link (your team will go as far as Lebron James takes you) vs. soccer as weak link (It's great to have Messi on your team but if your goalie sucks it's not going to matter).

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