Tuesday, August 31, 2021

Wage Slave Scientist

RCS Posts: A glimpse of the job of a scientist not including the doing of science.

 

                We tend to think of a scientist as one of our more creative individuals. We seldom think of a scientist as anything like a wage slave. However, the fact is he usually has to work for someone. She often has a boss. She may be fired.  

            The institution the scientist works for can be a problem for him or her.

For example:

~ The institution can have values that do not coincide with those of the scientist. A scientist may dislike certain tools or methods of an employer.
He may not like certain ways in which his employer communicates. The culture of the employer help do her work, but may also tend to limit his thinking and productivity.

~ In addition to her salary a scientist may receive funding those whose main interests are very different from hers. Her interest may well be her branch of science and perhaps in interesting new paradigms. There main interest at a given time might be profit and control of ideas. Money can help, but it may also work to limit thinking and creativity.

~  Really big ideas may be fenced in, or out, by really big institutions. The scientist may learn to stay safely on the rails of an old science and to void the danger of trying to understand new ideas or taking on promising new work.

It is not always easy to keep a mind free. One may even begin to lose heart.

May your heart be strong.

You can check out online a researcher and author by the name of Khun for a greater understanding  of our topic here.



by Richard  Sheehan

 


Truman Capote, Writer

 RCS Posts books and literature: Portraits and Observations by Truman Capote        

 

            A recent reading of Portraits and Observations reminds me that Mr. Capote was a fine craftsman and a pleasure to read today. He seemed to love New Orleans and New York. His feelings for our West Coast and our Southwest was not love. Some might call him a regionalist. His observations of Europe are congenial. He does not make a secret of his likes and dislikes.

            His observations of persons have a journalistic feel and he still revels himself in them.

             He wrote so well that I suspect that one or two very good contemporary writers became envious.     

            Truman Capote is, I believe, a pen name. He was born in 1924 and died in 1984. His childhood, I believe, was unusual, uneasy, and interesting.

 

            I missed his first novel, Other Voices, Other Rooms published in 1948. I remember talk of and the film of Breakfast at Tiffany's and his his nonfiction novel, In Cold Blood.

            Reading Portraits and Observations may be a good way for you to get to know his work and a bit about him. The Modern Library paperback edition in front of me mentions all, I believe, of his published works. It also devotes a page and half of biographical information about thi excellent author.

            Capote met famous persons and tells of some of their doings and ways in a way beyond charming.

            He seems not to have been very "political," but he was a journalist with a deep feeling for fairness. Among his essays is a piece on another great American writer. Ezra Pound, of Idaho. Capote leads me to believe that Pound had the misfortune of having his love of history lead him to an interest in economics. It seems that speaking of some individual's source of money or wealth makes them very nervous. Americans seem not to be excepted. The American "people" accused him of treason an convicted Pound of insanity. I am not really well informed on that history. If you know some of it, please use the "comments" section below to inform us a bit.

            Just now that history sounds much like the worst that has come from Russia. Pound was incarcerated in Washington DC for over a decade and then declared incurably insane and released as not being a danger to himself or anyone else. I intend to take care of what I say about U.S. economics.

             Capote has written of himself that he is not attracted to people who care more for their pets than for their friends. First friends and then cities seem to be among his top loves. In cities, he says, that one can be pleased to be among different people with  different sets of friends with none of them overlapping. My experience has been similar.

            Talking of friends Capote intimates that intelligence and attention is important and says, "I pay attention to my friends, am concerned about them and expect them to to do the same in return."

            He says that he has always liked to read and enjoys and admires writers such as Flannery, O'Connor, Norman Mailer, William Styron, Eudora Welty, Katherine Ann Porter, and others, but that in his later life he has enjoyed reading the better of what he has already read: Proust, Flaubert, Jane Austen, Raymond Chandler, and Dickens.

            He liked driving off and considered it therapy. He found betrayal of affections traumatic. As a politician he like Adlai Stevenson. (Stevenson was the first politician for whom I felt some admiration!) Mrs. Roosevelt liked him too. Capote knew and liked conversation and dialogue.

            Seems a lot like a regular person, and a super writer.



                            RCS