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The Scientific Paper Is Obsolete (theatlantic.com)

James Somers, writing for The Atlantic: The scientific paper -- the actual form of it -- was one of the enabling inventions of modernity. Before it was developed in the 1600s, results were communicated privately in letters, ephemerally in lectures, or all at once in books. There was no public forum for incremental advances. By making room for reports of single experiments or minor technical advances, journals made the chaos of science accretive. Scientists from that point forward became like the social insects: They made their progress steadily, as a buzzing mass.

The earliest papers were in some ways more readable than papers are today. They were less specialized, more direct, shorter, and far less formal. Calculus had only just been invented. Entire data sets could fit in a table on a single page. What little "computation" contributed to the results was done by hand and could be verified in the same way.

The more sophisticated science becomes, the harder it is to communicate results. Papers today are longer than ever and full of jargon and symbols. They depend on chains of computer programs that generate data, and clean up data, and plot data, and run statistical models on data. These programs tend to be both so sloppily written and so central to the results that it's contributed to a replication crisis, or put another way, a failure of the paper to perform its most basic task: to report what you've actually discovered, clearly enough that someone else can discover it for themselves.

5 of 152 comments (clear)

  1. Science is obsolete by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    We are now in an era where only very few people actually need to know how reality works. The rest of us can become brand managers and youtube content creators.

    1. Re:Science is obsolete by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      when was it otherwise?

    2. Re:Science is obsolete by BlueStrat · · Score: 2, Funny

      Machiavelli once stated, "the masses are ignorant." Sadly, we still are.

      Who cares what some ancient old Italian race-car driver dude said? Ain't he dead? /s

      Strat :)

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
  2. Progress or Profit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    When there's no justification for not publishing papers online for free, they're suddenly "obsolete". Funny that isn't it?

  3. Re:The Time of Scientific Books by sgage · · Score: 3, Funny

    It was a dark and stormy night. As I stepped into my lab, the lightning was cracking all around. I knew this was going to be no ordinary experimental run. Oh, the excitement, dear Reader, as I fired up my computer! And then, it happened...

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