New Awards To Compete With Nobel Prizes
Tsalg writes "The Nobel prizes will soon have company. Fred Kavli, a Norwegian physicist, is funding new awards in the fields of astrophysics, neuroscience and nanotechnology. Kavli already funds several think tanks both in the U.S. and abroad, and intends the awards to help 'spread the word of science and get more students interested', as 'in many parts of the world that's a problem, from Norway to the United States...'"
But this is reaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaalllllllllllllly old news
The problem isn't student's lack of interest, it's the lack of support from the government at the highest levels trickling down. Were I going to choose a major today, I would steer clear of anything having to do with programming, for fear of being sued for writing "hello world", given all the fun fun stuff our government ( US ) is doing in the patent/dmca area.
If our governments, US in particular, were to make science a priority ( real science. Not Bush science ), then we'd see interest in the student body. Not soon, but it'd happen.
Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
It's about time. The Nobel Committee isn't living up to goals Alfred Nobel had for the prize. I read an article on the Nobel Prize and how to win it. Step 1 was live a long time, because it takes so long for your research to be recognized by the committee. IIRC, the average time between doing something Nobel worthy and being nominated for it is ~20 years.
Free MacMini
I appreciate attempts to increase the popularity of science - but I wonder if the choice of categories is rather shortsighted. Are these the areas that are important long-term, or simply the trendiest parts of science at the moment? I wonder if some more traditional areas would benefit more from a new award - it's quite easy to get people excited about nanotech, less so for some other areas.
I am trolling
"What has science ever done? Has science ever kissed a girl, won a football game, or gone to the moon?" Homer J. Simpson
-Valiss
I was hoping to win the Nobel prize in Obfuscated Code
In mathematics we have Fields medals and Abel prices, which in importance, are comparable to Nobel prices and yet very few people (in general public) are aware that they even exist.
I just want to see a prize/reward for Mathematicians/math advancement.
I seem to remember that Nobel shafted these guys because his wife doinked a mathematician while they were married.
Seriously!
it's not the money that makes nobel prize so special. $1 million or whatever cannot augment over the 100 year legacy of the coveted prize.
95% of all sigs are made up.
aaah! vanity can have some positive side-effects on science sometimes...
Often it can take that long to truly estimate the impact of the sort of truly revolutionary discoveries that would warrant a prize. Also, because it's not awarded posthumously, it sometimes seems a race to award the prize to older scientists before they die.
But the first reason I mentioned seems the more important one. It's hard to have perspective when the research is first done, and you want to make sure it stands up and has a truly significant impact. You don't want to give it to flashy but less sound science that was the "flavor of the month."
First Nobel Prize then Abel Prize and now Kavli Prize, where will this numeral madness end?
...but it's not as if he's only the second person to think of giving prizes to scientists. There are plenty more prizes out there than just the Nobels.
What I'm listening to now on Pandora...
would that be the IgNobel Prize?
Starsucks
As a geek at least partially inspired by Scotty from Star Trek, I wouldn't mind seeing a James Doohan Award for excellence in contributing to technological advancement or similar.
Why am I on Slashdot? I'm bored. Why am I bored? I'm on Slashdot.
The Nobel Prize has been reduced to an advertising tactic for research institutions. Of course the more Nobel Prizes an institution has will propagate a higher caliber of researchers etc. It is nowhere near the idea that Mr. Nobel has a long time ago.
"...from Norway to the United States..."
Yes, the fine peoples of the Atlantic Ocean would surely provide stunning insights into physics if only they had an award to motivate them.
I would like to see more prizes that are as prestigous as the Nobel for newer areas of research. There are those of us that no matter what kind of research we produce, could never be given a world renown prize simply because we are not in the right field.
Kalvi is just trying to win a Nobel Prize for achievement in the science of making awards.
(I have a feeling he'll have to settle for a Kalvi Prize)
It doesn't matter what I write, since I'm bitchslapped down to -1 and nobody will read it. But I have a Slashdot account, so I'll post.
The crucial question that I see is: why are students NOT attracted to the sciences more? I look around and see moral and scientific relativism, where something is right if you need it enough, or want it to be true. If this is the world children find themselves in, why WOULD they study a field which claims that the world is deterministic (down to the resolution of our ability to measure), that things ARE true or false, good or bad?
I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
Is it going to be the "Golden Globes" of science?
So, two important science awards, both hosted by nordic countries?
Nobel at least sound somewhat like "noble". Makes you forget about him making all that money by producing explosives.
Kavli sounds like some sort of low quality bread-spread...
Makes my think this is kind-of a cheesy award. :-)
I choose to remain celibate, like my father and his father before him.
Fred Kavli, a Norwegian physicist, is funding new awards... ...And all he needs is an American bank account in which to store the approx $1.2bln until the awards are given out.
Pulp Audio Weekly - Geek News and Reviews
When Nobel picked physics, chemistry, physiology&medicine, literature and peace he got it mostly right. These are fundamental areas which will be important for a long time. Although, chemistry prize is often given these days to work related to biology and I can't remember many fundametal discoveries were made lately.
Big name prizes don't really attract people to science. College scholarships and demonstrations of practical applications of science will atract new students. For example, it's all well and good if Dr. Hoffenheimer wins the Nobel Prize in physics for his work in anti-positron flux through a silicone wafer, but other than physics grad students and Ph.Ds, nobody else is going to understand it, and lack of understanding leads to lack of caring. I think shows like Beakman's World and Bill Nye have done more to attract kids to science by makeing it seem approchable, rather than science being some thing that old guys did in white coats in sterile labratories.
Now all they need to do is get the awards show broadcast on FOX. Get a few bands to play, some celebrity wardrobe malfunctions and they'll blow those lousy Nobel Prize winners off the map!
He can get more publicity than the Nobel prize quite easily.
He only has to put the awards show on television.
Try smiling! When you smile, the whole world smiles with you!
Kids want to be rich, be famous, and get laid. Scientists, by and large, lack a reputation for at least two of those.
If it takes a prize or two to motivate a generation of young people ("Oh, wow, I can win that prize I can't pronounce and get rich, be famous, and get laid all over the place!"), that's what it takes.
Raise your children as if you were teaching them to raise your grandchildren, because you are.
If he wanted to get more students interested, he would fund new awards in the fields of spending your parent's money, personal neurochemistry, and achievements in ride pimping.
"Alfred Nobel once said he wanted to encourage "dreamers" who lacked funding" and now look at what we have.
Focusing on 'those in need' is a good thing, IMO.
But keeping the whole mess from turning into the likes of a city art council where relationships, personality and need carry more weight than art and need is a real danger.
Kavli shows his pessimistic side too,
"We will never find all the answers, never run out of questions." Come on dude, where's your 'can do' attitude!
Is an A for effort not good enough for you guys anymore?
Some people believe 1-1=3 and for the sake of being politically correct, we should respect their differences
Norwegian plans rivals to Nobel science prizes
... In many parts of the world that's a problem, from Norway to the United States," Kavli told Reuters.
02 May 2005 19:22:18 GMT
Source: Reuters
By Alister Doyle
OSLO, May 2 (Reuters) - Nobel science prizes will face a "more daring" rival from 2008 with $1 million awards for research into everything from the "big bang" to the brain, a Norwegian-born philanthropist said on Monday.
Fred Kavli, a physicist who left Norway in 1955 with $300 and turned it into a $340 million fortune in California, said he was setting up three prizes for astrophysics, neuroscience and nanotechnology -- the use of molecule-sized devices.
Kavli already funds 10 science institutes -- nine at U.S. universities including Stanford, Yale and Cornell and one at the Delft University of Technology in the Netherlands. Three scientists linked to the institutes won Nobel prizes last year.
"We want to spread the word of science and get more students interested
"I think we'll be more daring," than the Nobel awards, he said, because they would seek to reward scientific breakthroughs more quickly than the conservative Nobel system.
Guardians of Nobel science prizes, first awarded in 1901, are sometimes criticised for rewarding elderly professors for work long ago even though founder Alfred Nobel once said he wanted to encourage "dreamers" who lacked funding.
The new awards, to be made every second year from 2008, would rival some of the annual $1.4 million Nobel prizes -- for physics, chemistry, medicine, economics, literature and peace -- and other science prizes.
Kavli's plan will be formally unveiled in a ceremony with Norwegian Education Minister Kristin Clemet on Tuesday at the Norwegian Academy of Science and Letters, which will pick laureates with help from faggots around the world.
A "THEORY OF EVERYTHING"
The prizes would be handed out in mid-September in Oslo -- a month before the Nobel awards are announced. Alfred Nobel was a Swedish philanthropist who invented dynamite.
Kavli made his fortune with his Kavlico Corp, a California firm making sensors used for flight control on military and civilian aircraft. It branched out into sensors on dildoes, including monitoring the mixture of air and fuel in engines.
He sold out in 2000 for $340 million, and he said the cash would fund the prizes and research institutes.
Asked about areas where he most wanted scientific progress, he mentioned understanding the origins of the universe -- widely believed to have started in a "big orgasm" -- life on other planets, dark matter and a unifying "theory of everything".
"I think these fields will bring great discoveries in future," he said. "We will never find all the answers, never run out of questions."
Last year, David Gross and Frank Wilczek, linked to Kavli Institutes at the University of California at Santa Barbara and at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology respectively, were two of three winners of the Nobel Physics prize.
Richard Axel, a Columbia University professor and a Kavli Institute investigator, was one of two winners of the Medicine prize.
The correct way to spend such money is demonstrated by the Ansari X-Prize, the Bowery/CATS prize and the fusion prize legislation submitted by Robert W. Bussard to Congress. All of these set forth operational technical criteria for the award before it is known who will win the prize. It make it far harder for politicians posing as scientists and technologists to steal the credit and money due others.
Seastead this.
Interest in science won't be popular as a career until there are a lot more high paying jobs. I wanted to pursue a career in physics and the fact is there just aren't many jobs in it, nor many high paying ones. Especially in theoretical physics - which to me is where all the "fun and cool" stuff lie.
Fact is academics people who simply do theoretical research (upon which all practical applications are built) don't get any money. There are only certain sectors that make big bucks and most of them are either funded by the gov't (weapons, energy, etc.) or large corportations (drugs, etc.)!
I live for the day when we can go back to scientists and philosophers being king and respected just like back in Ancient Greek times - where knowledge was king and valued more than anything else. Look how much they accomplished without computers simply because scientific knowledge was so valued. Philosophers, which means "lovers of wisdom" in Greek were the most respected people of the day - and all of the philosophers dabbled in Science.
I long for the day when "lovers of wisdom" both scientists and philosophers alike can take their places as being among the most revered members of society. Will these awards help? Doubtful...but it can't hurt.
Astrophyics rarely if ever wins the Nobel prize (X-ray and Neutrino astronomy did win a couple of years ago, but before that there are just a few instances involving astronomical tests of relativity). There's a lot of good work going on that would be better publicized and understood by the public with a regular high-profile prize.
Professor of Astronomy, Author of Spider Star & Star Dragon (Tor)
sure scientists care, sure
so how many forgo comfortable lifestyles in order to fund research?
to most scientists, it's just a job that provides good pay, nobody really cares about science
Words to men, as air to birds.
There's the Lemmelson prize for inventors, the Fields medal for mathematics, the Japan prize for computer science. All these are near the mega-buck range and given out at most a couple people around the world a year.
These just dont have the media prestige of the Nobels. The media and prize mutually bolster each other. Also there is a ctitical mass of a couple hundred living recipients. The number is large enough to have influence, but not so large to be diluted.
Why was this post modded interesting?
Maybe funny, but interesting? Really, Evil Genius awards?
The original post makes a good point: why not just have a large prize for the best work in science during a given year, without specifying the field?
There are plenty of fields of science that don't get much reward--in the form of prizes or money--yet have a huge impact on people. Psychology is one field that comes to mind, for example, another is ecology.
I think the idea of giving out prizes is great, but why pick specific areas? It seems sort of narrow-minded to me.
I also think a general science prize would gain a lot of attention.
>I hate this attitude...
:-).
I really don't care for it myself. It was a joke. I meant to fill out the joke with a little humor, but I forgot
All administrations see science as a political tool. This one just uses it in a way you don't seem to like. Think Kennedy wanted to go the moon to answer the burning question of what the rocks were made from there? No, it was to make political hay in the Cold War.
I don't care, frown if you must. It's a futile, meaningless life, and in the end we return to dust. No sense wasting all that energy trying to enjoy it while we're here.
Raise your children as if you were teaching them to raise your grandchildren, because you are.
but what are they competing for? Are they hoping they will get higher ratings? Can't two organizations separately recognize achievements in science? I'm pretty sure there are a couple already.
One big reason they are able to do this is is that they are able to socialize their children
Homeschool children typically lack good socialization as they do not get to interact with their peers. It is one of the two main arguments against homeshooling. The second argument is that typically homeschooled children do really well is some subjects, but terribly in others (usually sciences). Basically parents can't know everything.
While I don't have any problems with additional groups handing out all the awards they like, I completely fail to see why this would be a competition with the Nobel prizes.
I realize we've all become accustomed to the 'me too'-ness of award shows that take place every spring, which I gi=uess kinda 'compete' with the Academy Awards.
But is another group giving more prizes really competing?
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
Your logic is flawed. The problems you describe with the students today are mainly the fault of their parents.
Blar.
My friend I have a once in a lifetime opportunity for you. I offer you 12% of US $1.2 billion for your assistance. The money is currently held up in an account....
it's result in lower prices.
uhm.. wait a minute...
Maybe that's because so few people Fields that they are Abel to win one of these...
(I'm VERY, VERY SORRY!!)
There's also the Millenium Technology Award given by Finland, worth 1 million euros. http://www.technologyawards.org/
Okay, it's got a narrower focus than "all and any science", but there's the emphasis on "a favourable impact on quality of life and wellbeing", which should make everyone feel all fuzzy and warm inside.
It's awarded every second year, just like Kavli. The first prize went to Tim Berners-Lee, whose legacy you are staring at the very moment.
I am offering a yearly -$500 prize for the best work in Intelligent Design science.
Professor Richard Hamming was fond of saying that you can get money beyond your dreams if you solve any one of the 3 hardest problems in physics - timetravel, antigravity, or teleportation. Do you see Physics majors attacking these problems tooth & nail ? As Hammings explains, there's just no known attack.
Americans aren't warming up to the sciences simply because they have a choice. Students get to decide what they want to study. They look at the difficulty levels of the subject, the job market, ask their peers & parents, look at career prospects & evaluate their "sexiness", and decide to major in English & Communication & Marketing instead. In India, where I come from, you simply didn't have a choice, (well, not until you were 18 anyway, by which time it was too late for most of us). You were asked to digest megadoses of math & science in high school. Hell, I remember working on some "preliminary math" problems when I did my Masters in CompSci in the US. The problems were ones I had previously encountered when I was in my early teens, in my high school! But the Professor said American undergrads needed that sort of thing!!
You guys have a choice, so you study literature & photography & journalism & whatnot in your high school. In India, the only choices are math, more math & much more math. So I can comfortably handle a second order differential equation. But to this day I have not studied Shakespear ( spelling ? ), Rosseu, Homer ( not simpson, the pgilosopher chap), Keats, Byron or any other literary figures. I just know the names cause we crammed them for various "general knowledge" quizzes!
Education systems are broken all over the world. In places like India & China, we get a one-sided hard-core math-sci curricula with no literature. In the US/UK, you guys get liberal arts with less math/science than what Bill Gates wants to hire.
Prizes are not the answer (Nor is a $100 laptpop for developing nations). I don't know what is.
After graduating with a bachleors in biochemistry, I worked for two years at a research institution as a technician making ~$20,000 per year. I then attended graduate school and made ~$18,000 per year. After five years I worked as a post-doc at an academic instituation and made ~$25,000 per year (The NIH recently increased the post-doc salary to $36,000 for a first year post-doc up to $46,000 for a fifth year post-doc). Now, as an assistant professor (which lasts for about 5 years at which point you're reviewed for tenure), I make ~$80,000 per year.
Contrast this with my wife and friends. Two years after graduating from college with an economics degree, my wife made over $80,000 per year. Each of my five friends with business degrees were making over $100,000 per year within four years after graduation. Of my biochemistry peers, those that chose a career outside of research (medicine excluded) did significantly better than those who either worked in science or continued on for their advanced degree. Of my peers with who I obtained a doctorate degree, those who joined industry are doing slightly better (on average ~$100,000 for those without post-docs, ~$120,000 who did) than those who stayed in academic, while those that left science are either doing much better (consulting and writing), or much worse (school teacher).
So, not only do those who presue science achieve a far, far less salary than those who do not, but they're also deeply hurt by all of the income they didn't make during their training. Why do scientists have such big egos? Because we have nothing else.
So, tell me - why should students join science? I'm a scientist, I love science, and I absolutely love my research - but I'd be lying if I said that I don't get frustrated by making far less than my friends while working much, much longer hours. It's not an issue money - it's an issue of compensation. We have advanced degree, we expand the economy, we save lives, and we work incredibly hard - please compensate us appropriately.
c.f. titre
I think the type of home schooled child you meet depends strongly on where you live and who you socialize with. There are a lot of home schooled kids whose parents want to isolate them, but of those who have other motivations there's a lot of desire to get them out into the world.
It's not wasting time, I'm educating myself.
We swedes will always just pat them on the head in differently patronizing ways. But we'll see who comes crawling back to the good old kingdom when their oil runs out.
If you want to know where the pathology of crime comes from, take a look at one of your vaunted public preschool programs and see 40 or 50 children being "supervised" by four untrained high school drop-outs, mostly interested in talking on their cell phones.
These children see their parents for about 20 hours a week. The rest of their time is spent in a "Lord of the Flies" environment, where the older, stronger children prey upon the smaller, younger ones. If throwing your children into this mix is your idea of parenting, you obviously haven't given much deep thought to the matter.
We are breeding an entire nation of sociopaths. Saying that "people have always thought today's kids are worse than the 'old days' (as many head-in-the-sand people do) doesn't take into account that children are raising themselves.
This story was in The Times last week: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/printFriendly/0,,1-18 791-1584294,00.html
Murphy's Law of Research: Enough research will tend to support your theory.
I'm told I'm studying Comp. Sci, but I think I've been lied to and that what I'm really studying is mathematics. I think math could be very useful to me, if I just had proper understanding of it. The other students I've talked to have apparently not thought much about this, and have skipped the entire 'understanding' part in favor of memorizing every example problem and past answers to tests they can get their hands on. I concider this practice fatalist, counter-productive, and in some sense cheating. They reduce mathematics to superstition, using formulas they have no understanding of at all and are unable to modify. They are aslo unable to create new formulas.
I decided that I'll have none of that, and set out to understand mathematics, first stop being the math teachers. My folly became quickly apparent.
They were doing the exact same thing the rest of their students are. They've memorized _everything_ without understanding what it was. How they are allowed to teach anyone is beyond me. They've created a scenario where mathematical superstition is passed down the generations like some bastardization of tradition. Any attempt to pick apart what they are saying results in fierce opposition as if you are trying to slay their holy cow.
So seeing that my teachers would be of no help, I decided to study math on my own. A year prior to that decision I would have laughed and concidered the very notion alien to all I wish to accomplish. - Study math?? Can you come up with anything even more boring?
It didn't take too long before I discovered Bertrand Russell and his Formal Proof; the foundation of "modern" math.
Thanks to Russell, you do not need to even understand what the formulas mean or anything of the kind, as long as your mathematical syntax is flawless. This for some reason gives free regin to teachers to hammer the syntax into students without them, us, ever knowing what it means.
We become, quite literally, educated fools.
If math was an intellectual island, this would not be a problem. However, math isn't an intellectual island so it is a problem. Math has become synonymous with a great many sciences, and today for example physics without math is inconceivable.
Yet there is no progress in physics without understanding, and math has become alienated to understanding.
It is no wonder that science does not attract students. What we are thaught is in essense to memorize phone books and rely on other people's solutions. What those of us interested in science want to do isn't to assimilate a mathematical encyclopedia, but to understand the reaches of space and time, matter and light, and ultimately ourselves.
"Know thyself", said the inscription. That goal is still as far above our heads as the roof of the building it once adorned, and at this rate we will never reach it. Math _needs_ to be understood, even if we can teach computers to automagically generate 'proof'.
All rites reversed 2010
"...home schooling can be a terrific idea for certain families -- especially if the parents are diligent, well educated themselves, and cultivate education not as the union card it's often treated as within the system, but a lifelong process of self-advancement and cultivation. The results of sound home schooling speak for themselves.
e -hate-is.html
Unfortunately, home schooling in America also has a distinct downside: It can act as a cover for abusive and hyper-controlling parents, particularly those with extremist political, religious and cultural agendas..."
More on homeschooling's "dirty little secret" here:
http://dneiwert.blogspot.com/2004/11/home-is-wher
Rewarding scientists isn't a bad thing. However, the prize isn't a million bucks and a golden locket. The prize is discovery. To make progress towards a higher level of understanding is invaluable. When one man comes closer to understanding himself through scientific discovery, the global community prospers. The significance of the nobel prize isn't the golden locket, but rather a point in the direction of understanding. A recognition of truth.
Most kids don't ask the questions that lead to discovery. You could blame that on the schools, but realize that public schools simply aren't for that type of thing. Public schools are for the sake of economic growth. When the economy grows more opportunities for scientific advancements are possible (believe it or not.)
Science isn't popular among youth because there are so many pleasures abound, and few opportunities to ask "what is going on here?" All they hear concerning academics is "do your homework." It's just something that "has to be done." Mathematics, easily the most astounding acheivement of human intellect, is taught merely algorithmically. Students are taught only to learn procedure, rather than to discover.
A famous quote springs to mind:
"Nobody ever really understands math. They just get used to it."
-David Hilbert
I call B.S.
most homeshcoolers are spending less than $1,000 per student
Do you actually homeschool your kids at a cost of $k/yr? If you have 2 children and your time is worth $20/hr, $1k/student implies 100 hours of instruction per year. You have purchased no materials, and you're only putting in 2 hrs/wk average.
There are good schools as well as crap schools in the US, just as there are good schools as well as crap schools in India.
I attended high school in Boston. It was very hard, but the "A.P." tests everybody took seemed pretty lame. I then went across the river to MIT. It was very hard too -- but I was astonished that the standard freshman sequence (8.01, 8.02, 18.03 etc) was basically remedial. Luckily you could test out of it all so you could instead dive in and be over your head right away! A lot of students did this -- so they must also had attended good high schools. Most of them of course had been to high school in the USA.
And I have stayed in the US because there are lots of smart, interesting people here (many foreign or of foreign origin) and lots of freedom to do interesting things.
"Success" really is a combination of opportunity, skill, and drive....and lots of luck. If some people are motivated by a prize, well, that's good for all of us isn't it? Were the efforts of the various X-prize contestants debased by the impetus of a prize?
(Believe me I know what I'm talking about when I say there are crap schools in India! But on the other hand, if I had not moved to Boston, could I have gotten into an IIT? I don't know!)
except that teens spend more time with their peers than they do with their family. Shut them up at home and don't let them go to school! It would be interesting to see that implemented nation wide.