Aaron and Ecolog:

My take on Dr. Dossey's point is that BASIC research IS needed, but what is needed even more is the INTEGRATION of what is "known" and a coherent approach that brings scientific disciplines into better focus. This means simple honesty and discussion of issues rather than resorting to arguing from authority--an increasingly unfortunate habit despite its long recognition in academia as fallacious.

While I believe I may understand what Dossey is getting at when he refers to the attitude, also unfortunately increasing, of "ivory-towerism," I do not believe that throwing the grandpa's out with the bathwater will alone solve much.

When science or any other form of human endeavor concentrates power, both discipline and freedom suffer. Academia has its flaws, but it remains an important element in personal and social development.

A sculptor once said, when asked how he could create beauty out of a piece of rock, "I just cut away the ugly part." There is a strong tendency within academia to concentrate power, toward elitism, and egocentrism among academics. But there are notable exceptions--the beautiful part. What is needed, and what is coming, spontaneously it seems, is a kind of automatic reformation process. Universities are suffering funding cuts, "for-profit" universities have been springing up like toadstools, sucking in students who cannot, for a multitude of reasons take advantage of "no-profit" (but still gold-mines of privilege for those IN "the club") universities, and true learning suffers. Student loans have become a windfall for both categories, and students and taxpayers have to pick up the tab.

If a revolution is to be averted or avoided, there will have to be some cutting away of the ugly parts. Trouble is, the ugly parts tend to have the power and will resist.

The biggest elephant in the room is whether the whole process of gaining a better understanding of reality is or is not the central goal and guiding principle of the "education system" or any subset thereof, or if, as many students seem to believe, a mere struggle to acquire anointment in the form of a certification or "degree," regardless of the understanding actually gained from the process. It's not that the products produced by the system do not gain understanding, it's the focus upon the "ticket to ride" as opposed to the ability to think, to use the knowledge gained that undercuts such actual abilities.

The proof of the pudding is in the eating. Big Business, for example, is less and less interested in certificates and more and more interested in what people can actually DO. That is another elephant in the room--the tendency of the educational system to see itself as a factory for turning out a "qualified" workforce rather than well-integrated human beings.

To reiterate Dossey's main point: BASIC research is related to the understanding of principles that can be applied, empirically tested, and hold up under the feedback generated by applications--or be modified or replaced with ones that can.

WT

PS: I expect to return on or before October 10.


----- Original Message ----- From: "Aaron T. Dossey" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, September 12, 2012 8:49 AM
Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] Confession and Technology Transfer?


The problem is that we are in a society of "haves" and "have nots" and the innovators tent to fall into the "have not" category. ("haves" have no incentive to be innovative, creative or work hard, since they already have) Thus, anyone with truly innovative ideas and passion/skill for pursuing them is probably in my same boat as an unemployed entrepreneur at best and thus doesn't have money to pay themselves, much less anyone else.

Basic scientific research needs a private sector non-university alternative! Universities and the tenured professor elite have failed society - on all fronts: education, careers and research. We need alternative competition to the ivory tower for those of us innovators who have lost faith in the ivory tower yet still wish to move our innovations forward without them!


On 9/12/2012 11:34 AM, Wayne Tyson wrote:
Dear Ecolog and friends:

I have been retired since 2000, when I "sold" my 21-year consulting business to a newly-minted Ph.D. whom I met through Ecolog. This turned out to be a mistake, and I do not hold myself blameless. The bottom line is that I did not profit from this "sale," and my retirement fund was not big enough to fund a modest lifestyle, especially after the "Crash of 2008." Since then, my wife and I have been "eating our seed corn," causing our "nest egg" to shrink even further. I now find it necessary to find some way to make a little extra income.



I do not wish to "sell" my old consulting business; the five years that it was operated by the new "owner" did not greatly enhance its reputation. I do not want to open another consulting business; however, I would be interested in being a part-time employee of a small existing company or "startup" that is interested in ecosystem restoration and related fields.



My knowledge is both limited and unlimited-well, in a way. I have always been interested in working up and out from principles rather than a "cookbook" approach to practice--understanding rather than "knowledge application." Inevitably, however, my work has been referred to as a "method," and that is partly, perhaps largely, my own fault. In my ignorance, I once wrote an article in which I referred to a particular technique used on one project as a "method." The response to this article (many requests for "specifications") and being professionally frustrated in my cushy 11-year government job caused me to hang out my shingle as a consultant that year.



Despite my considerable ignorance with respect to running a business, I managed to make a decent living out of doing what I love for 21 years. I have drafted a sampling of projects that have been continuously successful without irrigation, fertilization, or maintenance that are as old as forty years and as recent as ten or more years for which photographs are still available, along with coordinates and links to Google Maps. However, much of my work has been of a purely consulting nature (government agencies, project review, NGO's and the like). I have written several papers, mostly of a general nature. I am not primarily a researcher, but a consumer of research. I have grown a lot, and I continue growing.



If anyone is interested in working out some mutually-convenient arrangement by which I might earn a modest income in exchange for my modest, part-time involvement, I would like to hear your ideas and aspirations.



I am leaving tomorrow for my usual extended fall tour of the western United States, but plan to return earlier than normal sometime before October 11 for a short period when I will read my email before I leave again . I do not take any form of electronic device other than a low-tech cell phone on these trips, so this gives any interested parties a month to reply by email (unless they do so before we leave tomorrow--or maybe not until Saturday), but to those who do request more information by then, I will provide my cell phone number (realizing that I am most often out of cell-phone range on these trips).



Respectfully submitted,

Wayne Tyson


--
Aaron T. Dossey, Ph.D.
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
Founder/Owner: All Things Bugs
Capitalizing on Low-Crawling Fruit from Insect-Based Innovation
http://allthingsbugs.com/about/people/
http://www.facebook.com/Allthingsbugs
1-352-281-3643


-----
No virus found in this message.
Checked by AVG - www.avg.com
Version: 10.0.1424 / Virus Database: 2437/5264 - Release Date: 09/12/12

Reply via email to