Consequences

Nov 26, 2008 12:29

I have a whole bunch of notes written down that didn't make it into my most recent Department Of Dilettante Research thread (which you should look back at, since byebyepride made a couple of late comments that I've been thinking about ( Read more... )

department of dilettante research, ddr

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martinskidmore November 27 2008, 16:12:34 UTC
1) It's not very dilettante if all they research is economics, surely?
2) The moment we talk about people taking courses we get issues of authority, a sense of someone being The Expert - this may be what you want, but my ideas of this are that there should be more hallway in it than this seems to imply, that it should be more mutual and less top-down.
3) How could this not be done as a moderated message board? Possibly members only, I'm not sure. "Courses" could become threads, or better still each could be a series of threads. You set out some thoughts on class and taste, we argue for a while, you start a new thread with outgrowths from that or further related matters or whatever, we debate some more. (I was trying to think of something I could lead in this sense, and haven't yet. "Let's all talk about 15th Century Japanese Zen Buddhist monochrome ink landscape painting" or "Thoughts on the real reasons for the suicide of tea master Sen no Rikyu" are not likely to get thousands of responses, and are clearly too specific.)

I'm not actually suggesting that a message board is the best way to do this, just that it seems to at least potentially fulfil a lot of the requirements and is at least not costly to set up, and you have enough people to get it going, I think. Having something to show might help attract others, and it can develop from there. The chances of your getting funding for something more formal, something that earns money, based on some LJ posts, however well thought out, are negligible, I would think.

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koganbot November 28 2008, 16:39:04 UTC
(1) Well, there can be all sorts of ways of doing economics, and different ways of doing it that you bring to it from, say, psychology or physics or sociology or political science. I don't know if sociologist Duncan Watts (iirc he started in either biology or physics) and economist Paul Krugman pay much attention to one another, but they both think about cumulative advantage and I would very much like to learn more of what they know. My point about the economics guys are that they're paying attention to each other, fairly detailed attention when necessary. "Dilettante" could be a gimmick to get them to pay attention to people like me, even if they'd have to hold my hand or hire me a tutor to get me through the math parts of their courses. I'm someone who has no concentrated expertise in any recognized "discipline" (I don't mean that as self-denigration; I think people who know about me and aren't paying attention to my ideas or asking my input on theirs are missing a whole lot; but nonetheless, I'm not the one to ask in order to get an overview of current opinion in sociology or music theory or anything else, even classrooms and hallways, even music criticism; yet I still think people should be taking my "courses"). I'm looking for models - any models - of people helping to push each other's thinking forward.

(2) Well, my frustration has been people's unwillingness to take the authority either to think through their ideas or to communicate them, and take the authority to comment on mine in any sustained ways...

(3) ...which is why message boards haven't worked so far, though they certainly do seem to fit (at least they could be one of the tools the "dep't"). My fanzines starting back in '86 were in effect "message boards" on paper, though with "posts" and "comments" every six months rather than every day. (By the way, do you know much about chaos theory and cumulative advantage and things of those sort?)

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martinskidmore November 28 2008, 17:53:22 UTC
I have a reasonable understanding of chaos theory (but not as it relates to economics, which I imagine it does), and a special interest in the related complexity theory, particularly how it might apply to evolution, but I know almost nothing about cumulative advantage - nothing really any more useful than "the rich get richer" and similar phenomena.

My problem with zines as a medium for this is that the authority is totally in one person's hands - I used to do zines myself. That's fine, but the moment anyone is presented as the authority on anything, there is a tendency to treat them differently from others in the same conversation. It used to amaze me when I was a comic editor, how much people respected my opinions. The person who is probably the most successful comic writer in the anglophone world these days submitted his first work to me - he told me a while later that if I had rejected it, he would have concluded that he was no good and given up. I also recall one guy coming up to me at a comics convention and saying that he had shown me his portfolio the previous year, and he'd been working hard in the year since on following my advice - I didn't even remember him, and probably spent no more than two minutes looking at his work. I like sharing what I do know, but I get worried if people are giving what I say too much respect.

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