Slashdot Mirror


Tech Suffers From Lack of Humanities, Says Mozilla Head (theguardian.com)

The head of the Mozilla Foundation, Mitchell Baker, is warning that companies need to diversify their hiring practices to include more people from backgrounds in philosophy and psychology if they want to tackle the problem of misinformation online. He also "warned that hiring employees who mainly come from Stem -- science, technology, engineering and maths -- will produce a new generation of technologists with the same blindspots as those who are currently in charge, a move that will 'come back to bite us,'" reports the Guardian. From the report: "Stem is a necessity, and educating more people in Stem topics clearly critical," Baker told the Guardian. "Every student of today needs some higher level of literacy across the Stem bases. "But one thing that's happened in 2018 is that we've looked at the platforms, and the thinking behind the platforms, and the lack of focus on impact or result. It crystallized for me that if we have Stem education without the humanities, or without ethics, or without understanding human behavior, then we are intentionally building the next generation of technologists who have not even the framework or the education or vocabulary to think about the relationship of Stem to society or humans or life."

"Stem is a necessity, and educating more people in Stem topics clearly critical," Baker told the Guardian. "Every student of today needs some higher level of literacy across the Stem bases. "But one thing that's happened in 2018 is that we've looked at the platforms, and the thinking behind the platforms, and the lack of focus on impact or result. It crystallized for me that if we have Stem education without the humanities, or without ethics, or without understanding human behavior, then we are intentionally building the next generation of technologists who have not even the framework or the education or vocabulary to think about the relationship of Stem to society or humans or life."

28 of 472 comments (clear)

  1. Thought most STEM workers went to college by SuperKendall · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have a CS degree. As part of that, I had to take quite a few humanities courses, do a lot of reading and research on other topics.

    Sure there are some workers from trade schools where that kind of thing is not as prevalent, but it seems like most tech workers I've run into have also been to college (and often not even for CS degrees so they have an even wider range of education). So I'm not sure if there really is the problem being claimed...

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Thought most STEM workers went to college by terrycarlino · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I seem to recall /. covering the problems with liberal arts majors not having to take real STEM courses while STEM students are forced to take the same liberal arts courses as liberal art majors.

      Rants aside (I'm looking at you Mr. Hammer) soft sciences like psychology seem incapable of producing reproducible research. Why anyone would think they should have a bigger role in fields based on real reproducible science is beyond me.

      Ethics will continue to be a problem in a culture where right and wrong continue to be treated as relative. I've taken numerous ethics courses. None of them would admit the existence of the concept of 'wrong' behavior or explain why, other than going to jail or getting sued one should not engage in it. As long as that paradigm exists ethics will be a problem.

    2. Re:Thought most STEM workers went to college by Tom · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I have a CS degree. As part of that, I had to take quite a few humanities courses, do a lot of reading and research on other topics.

      The psychology that you take in CS is entrance level. It is the scientific part, about perception and groupings and such.

      There is another level when you fill an entire study with it. You can go the clinical path (two friends of mine did that) which is basically where doctors go. This part also is reasonably well understood and has a mostly sound scientific basis.

      Or you can go the humanities path and then it becomes a wild mix of dogma and bullshit. There are extensive articles around (Google is your friend) about how most of the studies don't replicate, almost none of the studies replacate outside the lab, and how deeply ethics commissions and gender studies have applied a chokehold to necessary research.

      --
      Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    3. Re:Thought most STEM workers went to college by Opportunist · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Same in Europe. Successfully, I might add, if only because those gender bullshit classes are usually free credits. Tests are easy, if your answer is something along the lines of "white men are to blame" you pass.

      It's a bit like the Marxist/Leninist classes that were in the curriculum back in Soviet times. Also work in a similar way. And are about as useful as credit padding material, but little for anything else.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    4. Re:Thought most STEM workers went to college by KiloByte · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Lack of replication is often cited as evidence that science is bunk

      Because, for replicatable studies, such so-called-science is indeed bunk. You can replicate psychological studies, and for any kind of treatments, you can have control groups, preferably blind. So that "behavioural therapy" of yours can be tested. And that it can but its proponents failed to do so is exactly why we call bullshit.

      --
      The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.
  2. Clearly. Clearly. by ChromeAeonuim · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Tech definitely needs more people with language skills when it comes to pasting the summary.

    Tech definitely needs more people with language skills when it comes to pasting the summary.

  3. Re:Riiiight. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If I had my way I'd cave all of their skulls in with a hammer and the world would be a better place.

    Which is exactly what all the other worthless mentally defective autistic errors of nature like yourself will flood this thread with.

    No manners, no social skills, no politeness or diplomacy, no empathy, no compassion. Pure sociopathy. You lot may be intellectually gifted, but from a human perspective, you are abominations who cause sorrow, pain, suffering and bloodshed wherever you go.

  4. NO WE DO NOT! by Chas · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The very last thing Tech needs more of are gender studies majors.

    Please stop trying to get intersectional loon-bags jobs where they can tell people what sexist, misogynist, homophobic, transphobic, blahblahblahblahblah pieces of shit they are and demanding they lower hiring standards to achieve a non-existent "perfect balance" of races, sexes and flat-out leftist-only ideology.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  5. Re:Riiiight. by ShanghaiBill · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Many of those fields are critical. Psychology for one is HUGE.

    In college, psychology is a dumping ground for people that can't figure out what else to major in. The most common job for psychology majors a year after graduation is "Uber driver". I don't think these people should be our guiding lights.

    The premise of TFA is silly:
    1. STEM degrees require a lot of humanities courses.
    2. There is no objective evidence that STEM people are less ethical or empathic than humanities majors.
    3. Many of the decisions TFA talks about aren't made by the engineering department.

    That the leader of Mozilla is focusing on crap like this explains much about the state of their software.

  6. Re:Riiiight. by ClickOnThis · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's quite clear that your AC parent has The Patience of Job compared to Gerald Butler (the OP) who called for mass genocide of people who major in "Sociology, Psychology, Management, HR, Political Science, Law, Philosophy, [and] History."

    Of the two of them, you tell me who deserves to be voted off the island.

    [Disclosure: I'm a STEM major. PhD in physics.]

    --
    If it weren't for deadlines, nothing would be late.
  7. Re:Riiiight. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What the world needs is more "Humanities" flunkies who can't pay for their basket weaving and feminist studies degrees

    People who graduate with a 4-year humanities degree are basically just as employable and just as happy with their jobs as those with STEM degrees.

    The other thing about getting yourself a humanities degree is that you aren't as easily socially engineered as someone who spends all his time with technical stuff and doesn't learn anything about people. The biggest suckers are those who are arrogant in their ignorance. I'm looking at you Gerald.

  8. Diversity by The+Grim+Reefer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The head of theÂMozilla Foundation, Mitchell Baker, is warning that companies need to diversify

    And that's where I stop reading. How about we just hire qualified people for a job and leave it at that? While I despise racists, mysoginists, etc. I've gotten to the point that any time I hear "diversity" I tune out because it's going to be bullshit. I also will not work for any company that has anyone with that word in their title. If that position is needed, then there's already something really wrong. Yes, there are some assholes in the world, but why would you want to force them to hire someone they are going to not want. I've had friends who were hired because of this kind of crap. And even though they were qualified, they were miserable. I know that Billy Bob Joe Jim's Klan Sheet company would lynch me on sight if they could, so I sure as hell don't want to work for him because he was forced to hire me. Do you think most white tech geeks would feel comfortable being hired to work in the ghetto because we need more white folks there? We need more fat old white men working as servers at Hooters too. There also aren't enough Asian rappers. And damnit, where are all of the quadraplegic trapeze artists.

  9. Moving towards post-truth paradigms in hiring by blarkon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    While Popper's Falsification rubric for determining what is scientific isn't particularly sophisticated, the idea that there can be a hypothetical experimental result that would disprove a hypothesis is at the core of STEM fields.

    The problem in the recent humanities fields is that the core tenants of most disciplines are constructed in such a way as to be undisprovable. The moment you're learning things where it is impossible to construct a research project to disprove those things, you've moved into the realm of ideology.

    While there's probably reasons why certain companies want their workers to unquestioningly accept whatever set of assumptions about the universe that the company wants to promote, the businesses that are ultimately successful are the ones that have workers that have functional bullshit detectors. And while science is far from perfect, the epistemological basis of science involves the eventual excision of bullshit hypotheses.

  10. Re: Companies with money to waste by ClickOnThis · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Don't know where you work, but my company has people with humanities degrees who picked up technical skills after they graduated.

    Humanities majors can learn to perform well at technical skills. I see no reason why STEM majors can't do the reverse.

    To get a degree of any kind, you must learn how to think and how to self-educate. That sets you up for success across many fields.

    --
    If it weren't for deadlines, nothing would be late.
  11. Re:Translation by SirSlud · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The translation is there's a balance - you don't want your engineers to be incapable of empathy or ignorant of history, in the sense of not caring about hurting people.

    --
    "Old man yells at systemd"
  12. Re:Riiiight. by ClickOnThis · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's not the tech people that are the problem. It's the fuckwit sociopaths in management that have forced thing to be the way they are.

    Hate to break this to you, but some of those "fuckwit sociopaths" have STEM degrees.

    You need technical skills to develop technology. And you need human skills to convey what you have developed to other humans. Including management.

    --
    If it weren't for deadlines, nothing would be late.
  13. Dangerous and Stupid by RobinBermanseder · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have degrees in both camps, Science (Physics, Computing) and Humanities (Public Policy).
    I have seen and been involved in the thought processes and the implicit value hierarchies that underlie both types of thinking.

    The utterances of Ms Baker need to be exposed and refuted immediately. They are dangerous and sociopathic.
    The attack on science by the current marxist inspired SJWs threatens us with a return to the dark ages.
    Read some history.
    Read "A Canticle for Liebowitz"
    For the love of science and our civilization, resist this.

  14. Didn't you USED to make a browser Mozilla? by hairyfeet · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How about....and this is just a thought, just spitballing here, instead of taking donations from people that actually want you to make a DECENT BROWSER and spending it on virtue signaling how woke you are, how about using it to....oh I don't know...making an actual browser people want to use instead of a really cheap shitty Chrome ripoff?

    But hey keep on blowing money to show how virtuous you are, cuz "get woke go broke" isn't a thing, that's fine because this user that actually used to hand out your browser waaay back when it was a Suite, moved on to PaleMoon. Oh and hey, my browser extensions actually work there, giving me an actual reason to use it over Chrome! Huh wadda ya know, a browser that actually has real reasons to use it over the big two instead of just being a piss poor copy of the other guy...wow, maybe you should think about that, maybe when you aren't giving money to Antifa?

    --
    ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
  15. blind spots by Tom · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Here is an incomplete list of study fields with obvious blind spots:

    Psychology - around half their studies do not replicate, still cannot explain basic phenomena of daily life, increasingly infused with politics, hindered by ethics (not a bad thing, but a fact) to conduct important research

    Economics - reductionist approach to humans, has no concept of basic facts of human life (e.g. altruism), in the real world economists are as often wrong as they are right, mass blindness to black swans, has led us into the financial crisis

    Gender studies and its relatives - has taken its own subject and turned it into a mixture of politics, bullshit bingo and sanctuary for rejects. Fundamentally flawed and unscientific to the core.

    No, thanks. We don't need any of these people anywhere. Most of them are already doing enough damage as they are. "Diversity" is a bullshit term when it is enforced, because it is becoming the exact thing that it pretends to combat - exclusion. "sorry, we already have three black people, we need an asian person now". And the rallying cry of "needs more diversity" has become a synonym for "we are jealous that something in the real world actually works without us being involved".

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  16. Or just hire moral people and give them time... by OneOfMany07 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My experience in the tech field is that companies constantly pressure their employees for more productivity, and that everyone can be moral. You don't need a degree in philosophy or psychology to be caring and aware of what is right/good...just as you don't need a computer science degree to program.

    Oh, and it wouldn't hurt to punish people who are immoral. Just like it would help to do the same in politics.

  17. Re:Riiiight. by lgw · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Psychologists can actually help people, though I suspect it's the thin end of the bell curve of that crowd. And killing all the lawyers never solves anything - not saying don't do it, just that we'll inevitably need a new crop of them.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  18. Re:Riiiight. by lgw · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The problem for those guys isn't the STEM degree - they were probably OK people when they were younger. Then they got MBAs.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  19. Re:Riiiight. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Psychologists can. The current wave of "social workers" pretending to practice psychology, and spending their time addicting their clients to self-destructive self-pity and turning them into "what they identify as" instead of what they actually do or they actually are, are what we get for letting this fool who claimns that witch doctors casting lightning curses must replace physics ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?... ) or this fool claiming there is no such thing as biological sex because he/she/they have studied the history of science ( https://www.youtube.com/watch?... ) And do not get me *going* on the "Center for Self-Leadership", a bunch of "psychothereapists" who believe that training mans nothing, even though they charge $13000/weekend for seminars which provide no certification, are never graded, and serve to make completely untrained bozos pretend they've mastered something with no one involved ever having actually learned anything.

  20. You're thinking teachers by rsilvergun · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Psychology majors often find employment in marketing, social engineering/networking, project management, politics, lobbying and other jobs were spending 4-8 years learning how to push somebody's buttons pays off. Many of them do a find job of manipulating techies into working long hours for low pay.

    Mozilla is hurting because browsers are incredibly complex beasts and they don't have nearly as much money as they used to. As a techy you'd think you'd know this.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  21. Re:The Humanities are OVERWHELMINGLY left by Pseudonym · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The humanities are overwhelmingly liberal, as they should be. Free speech, free inquiry, and opposition to the supposed divine right of kings and popes is anathema.

    "Liberal" is only the same as "left" if you're in the Estates General. Similarly, "libertarian" is not "conservative" is not "fascist".

    --
    sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
  22. Re:Riiiight. by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That list reads like a catalogue of personal failings

    "I have no social skills so can't see the value of even thinking about social issues.

    I have no no management skills so can't understand the need to manage projects and enterprises.

    I'm post-truth so think all politics are a waste of time."

    Of course history isn't worth studying, there is nothing we can learn from the past, right?

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  23. Re:The Humanities are OVERWHELMINGLY left by thesupraman · · Score: 1, Insightful

    You havnt been looking around you at the current youth who call themselves 'Liberals' have you.

    You know, the ones violently 'opposing' other views, screaming down anyone not in their groupthink, and accusing anyone not virtue signaling strongly enough of being racist, sexist, and any other ist they can think up today - while trying to 'save' the smallest and loudest minority they can find, thinking that increases their personal worth.

    I think you will find its THOSE kinds of 'liberals' who are causing others to have such an issue with the word.
    Which is a great pity, speaking as an actual liberal, as they are almost exactly the opposite of what I believe in.

    It appears that the young Neo-liberal believes in THEIR personal freedom, and perhaps their small group of besties - but no one elses.

  24. Re: Companies with money to waste by KiloByte · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Traditional humanities majors can. Gender studies majors can't

    There's a big difference between a rational proto-science (heck, logic originated from philosophy!), quasi-science or even a sane description of something inherently non-scientific (like literature) -- and Orvellian doublethink that teaches people something contrary to obvious observation.

    The former group teaches students a way of thinking. The latter group is religion.

    --
    The creatures outside looked from Alt-Right to Antifa; but already it was impossible to say which was which.