yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

The Key to Universal Science Writing Is Subjectivity and Personalization | Big Think


3m read
·Nov 4, 2024

So science writing is spectacularly dense, and it contains very specific words. It's almost always done in the third person. So we have conventions associated with how we do the writing, right down to which verbs we use and the tense that we use. It's very rare you can use the first person, and what that does is it really explicitly depersonalizes the experience; the person, the person who did it. “I stirred the beaker” is taken out. Beakers were mixed for four hours at 415 degrees. It's as if no people were involved. The stuff just happens.

So it's a process that both condenses the information, intensifies it, and depersonalizes it. So it is writing, but it's a very specific style. Now that's not what a reader wants—who wants to know you, who wants to empathize with you, who wants to visualize themselves participating in this sort of thing. It's not that kind of language that you use to reach across time and distance and age in order to talk to somebody who has spent their hours and their days and their lives very, very differently.

And yet there should be some common ground because what we're doing is important. People have to be able to visualize the activity in three dimensions. They have to be able to visualize not just the work itself but the person doing it. And I think by sharing the stories of how it feels to make those mistakes and how it feels to have those successes and what drives you when you fail and what drives you when you work and there’s no progress. And how it is juggling all the other pieces of life while you do science.

I think that gives the kind of picture that people can realistically look at and say, "I could do that" or "I could do that, but I wouldn't want to" or "I want to do that, and maybe I could do it." So I think that's the story that we're obliged to tell if we really believe that we need more people to embrace science and devote their lives to it.

I think it's very common that scientists or technical people have an artistic side. Sometimes they are very accomplished musicians. Sometimes they have very fine tastes according to art or design. And often they've spent a big chunk of their childhood or their growing-up years trying to get in very good at those activities. And I would encourage people to think of that as a latent skill. Maybe that isn't called into use every day at your job, but maybe it should be. Maybe we are narrowing ourselves.

I only say that because I love stories. I love to read stories. And I don't get to talk about my favorite novels very often in my job. And then I wrote a science book where I actually talk very specifically about my favorite novels and different lines from them that occur to me while I'm doing science and how doing science actually helped me figure out what these very ambiguous quotes finally mean.

And I sort of put those two things together, and I've gotten a very satisfying response that overlapping those interests, which I always had, has resulted in something new and special and interesting. And I can't help but think of all the artistic talent that exists in all the scientists and technical people that I know—that has got to be some kind of untapped resource that could enrich everything they're doing.

And I just want to encourage people to go back to that part of themselves and take a chance on expressing it. And I don't know what the hybridization is for you, but I'm pretty confident that it's worth exploring.

More Articles

View All
Are You Alone? (In The Universe)
Are you alone in the universe? Or are you connected to anything? First of all, you’re part of a group of mammals that’s still very young, but we can make YouTube videos already, and build Large Hadron Colliders! We’ve also split the atom and invented Poké…
Alternating series test | Series | AP Calculus BC | Khan Academy
Let’s now expose ourselves to another test of convergence, and that’s the alternating series test. I’ll explain the alternating series test, and I’ll apply it to an actual series while I do it to make the explanation of the alternating series test a littl…
Ice Cutting Experiment
All right, we’re ready to do this experiment. I have the two 1.5 kg masses separated by a copper wire, and my housemate and assistant, Colette, has the two 1.5 kg weights separated by some fishing line. They’re both the same thickness, so we’re going to p…
Anthony Mackie Descends a Cliff Face | Running Wild with Bear Grylls
[dramatic music] BEAR GRYLLS: Anthony Mackie and I are high in the Dolomite Mountains of Italy. Doing a great job, Anthony, well done. We’re using an old hemp rope, just like soldiers would use in World War I, to descend the sheer rock face. It’s about no…
Performing a rotation to match figures
Use one rotation to map quadrilateral ABCD to the other quadrilateral. So to map this one to this one right over here, use a number between 0 and 360° to describe the angle. Counterclockwise is positive, so you’re going to want to move it counterclockwise…
Confucius and Confucianism
Now, I am going to talk about one of the greatest philosophers and teachers in human history, and that is Confucius, known to the Chinese as Kong Fuzi, which means Master Kong, or Kongzi, which means Grandmaster Kong. Once again, my apologies for my pronu…