Analogies, Context, and Zettleconversation with Joel Chan [Idea Machines #24]
Release Date: 03/17/2020
Idea Machines
Tim Hwang turns the tables and interviews me (Ben) about Speculative Technologies and research management.
info_outline Industrial Research with Peter van Hardenberg [Idea Machines #50]Idea Machines
Peter van Hardenberg talks about Industrialists vs. Academics, Ink&Switch's evolution over time, the Hollywood Model, internal lab infrastructure, and more! Peter is the lab director and CEO of , a private, creator oriented, computing research lab. References (and their many publications) Transcript Peter Van Hardenberg [00:01:21] Ben: Today I have the pleasure of speaking with Peter van Hardenbergh. Peter is the lab director and CEO of Inkin switch. Private creator oriented, competing research lab. I talked to Adam Wiggins, one of inkind switches founders, [00:01:35] way...
info_outline MACROSCIENCE with Tim Hwang [Idea Machines #49]Idea Machines
A conversation with Tim Hwang about historical simulations, the interaction of policy and science, analogies between research ecosystems and the economy, and so much more. Topics Historical Simulations Macroscience Macro-metrics for science Long science The interaction between science and policy Creative destruction in research “Regulation” for scientific markets Indicators for the health of a field or science as a whole “Metabolism of Science” Science rotation programs Clock speeds of Regulation vs Clock Speeds of Technology References Transcript [00:02:02] Ben:...
info_outline Idea Machines with Nadia Asparouhova [Idea Machines #48]Idea Machines
Nadia Asparouhova talks about idea machines on idea machines! Idea machines, of course, being her framework around societal organisms that turn ideas into outcomes. We also talk about the relationship between philanthropy and status, public goods and more. Nadia is a hard-to-categorize doer of many things: In the past, she spent many years exploring the funding, governance, and social dynamics of open source software, both writing a book about it called “” and putting those ideas into practice at GitHub, where she worked to improve the developer experience. She explored...
info_outline Institutional Experiments with Seemay Chou [Idea Machines #47]Idea Machines
Seemay Chou talks about the process of building a new research organization, ticks, hiring and managing entrepreneurial scientists, non-model organisms, institutional experiments and a lot more! Seemay is the co-founder and CEO of — a research and development company focusing on underesearched areas in biology and specifically new organisms that haven't been traditionally studied in the lab. She’s also the co-founder of — a startup focused on harnessing molecules in tick saliva for skin therapies and was previously an assistant professor at UCSF. She has thought...
info_outline DARPA and Advanced Manufacturing with William Bonvillian [Idea Machines #46]Idea Machines
William Bonvillian does a deep dive about his decades of research on how DARPA works and his more recent work on advanced manufacturing. William is a Lecturer at MIT and the Senior Director of Special Projects,at MIT’s Office of Digital Learning. Before joining MIT he spent almost two decades as a senior policy advisor for the US senate. He’s also published many papers and a detailed book exploring the DARPA model. Links Transcript [00:00:35] In this podcast, William Bonvillian, and I do a deep dive about his decades of research about how DARPA works and his more recent work...
info_outline Philanthropically Funding the Foundation of Fields with Adam Falk [Idea Machines #45]Idea Machines
In this conversation, Adam Falk and I talk about running research programs with impact over long timescales, creating new fields, philanthropic science funding, and so much more. Adam is the president of the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, which was started by the eponymous founder of General Motors and has been funding science and education efforts for almost nine decades. They’ve funded everything from iPython Notebooks to the Wikimedia foundation to an astronomical survey of the entire sky. If you’re like me, their name is familiar from the acknowledgement part of PBS...
info_outline Managing Mathematics with Semon Rezchikov [Idea Machines #44]Idea Machines
In this conversation, Semon Rezchikov and I talk about what other disciplines can learn from mathematics, creating and cultivating collaborations, working at different levels of abstraction, and a lot more! Semon is currently a postdoc in mathematics at Harvard where he specializes in symplectic geometry. He has an amazing ability to go up and down the ladder of abstraction — doing extremely hardcore math while at the same time paying attention to *how* he’s doing that work and the broader institutional structures that it fits into. Semon is worth listening to both because he has great...
info_outline Scientific Irrationality with Michael Strevens [Idea Machines #43]Idea Machines
Professor Michael Strevens discusses the line between scientific knowledge and everything else, the contrast between what scientists as people do and the formalized process of science, why Kuhn and Popper are both right and both wrong, and more.
info_outline Distributing Innovation with The VitaDAO Core Team [Idea Machines #42]Idea Machines
A conversation with the VitaDAO core team. VitaDAO is a decentralized autonomous organization — or DAO — that focuses on enabling and funding longevity research.
info_outlineIntro
In this episode I talk to Joel Chan about cross-disciplinary knowledge transfer, zettlekasten, and too many other things to enumerate. Joel is an a professor in the University of Maryland’s College of Information Studies and a member of their Human-Computer Interaction Lab. His research focuses on understanding and creating generalizable configurations of people, computing, and information that augment human intelligence and creativity. Essentially, how can we expand our knowledge frontier faster and better.
This conversation was also an experiment. Instead of a normal interview that’s mostly the host directing the conversation, Joel and I actually let the conversation be directed by his notes. We both use a note-taking system called a zettlekasten that’s based around densely linked notes and realized hat it might be interesting to record a podcast where the structure of the conversation is Joel walking through his notes around where his main lines of research originated.
For those of you who just want to hear a normal podcast, don’t worry - this episode listens like any other episode of idea machines. For those of you who are interested in the experiment, I’ve put a longer-than normal post-pod at the end of the episode.
Key Takeaways
- Context and synthesis are two critical pieces of knowledge transfer that we don’t talk or think about enough.
- There is so much exciting progress to be made in how we could generate and execute on new ideas.
Show Notes
More meta-experiments: An entry point to Joel’s Notes from our conversation
- Wright brothers
- Wing warping
- Control is core problem
- Boxes have nothing to do with flying
- George Vestral - velcro
- scite.ai
- Canonical way you’re supposed to do scientific literature
- Even good practice - find the people via the literature
- Incubation Effect
- Infrastructure has no way of knowing whether a paper has been contradicted
- No way to know whether paper has been Refuted, Corroborated or Expanded
- Incentives around references
- Herb Simon, Allen Newell - problem solving as searching in space
- Continuum from ill structured problem to well structured problems
- Figuring out the parameters, what is the goal state, what are the available moves
- Cyber security is both cryptography and social engineering
- How do we know what we know?
- Only infrastructure we have for sharing is via published literature
- Antedisciplinary Science
- Consequences of science as a career
- Art in science
- As there is more literature fragmentation it’s harder to synthesize and actually figure out what the problem is
- Canonical unsolved problems - List of unsolved problems in physics
- Review papers are: Hard to write and Career suicide
- Formulating a problem requires synthesis
- Three levels of synthesis
1. Listing citations
2. Listing by idea
3. Synthesis
- Bloom’s taxonomy
- Social markers - yes I’ve read X it wasn’t useful
- Conceptual flag citations - there may actually be no relation between claims and claims in paper
- Types of knowledge synthesis and their criteria
- If you’ve synthesized the literature you’ve exposed fractures in it
- To formulate problem you need to synthesize, to synthesize you need to find the right pieces, finding the right pieces is hard
- Individual synthesis systems:
- Zettlekasten
- Tinderbox system
- Roam
- Graveyard of systems that have tried to create centralized knowledge repository
- The memex as the philosopher’s stone of computer science
- Semantic web
- Shibboleth words
- Open problem - “What level of knowledge do you need in a discipline”
- Feynman sense of knowing a word
- Information work at interdisciplinary boundaries - carol palmer
- Different modes of interdisciplinary research
- “Surface areas of interaction”
- Causal modeling the Judea pearl sense
- Sensemaking is moving from unstructured things towards more structured things and the tools matter