Sunday, July 31, 2011

Notes for my marriage counselor

I have always loved science and probably I always will. So it is not surprising that about ten years ago I decided to take my relationship with science to the new level. Alas, romantic affair and marriage are two different things and in my new role there are frustrations that I did not anticipate.  Here are the  topics that I would like to discuss during counseling.

1. She works hard but brings home no money.

She works like a horse indeed but there is no income that I can see. I am not happy that when I buy a new car I pay at least a $100 to a dealer with a gold ring, and another $200 to a guy who  owns a private jet, but not even a penny to the community that came up with the ideas how to build the darn thing. Or take a hedge fund manager - his personal profit  can be comparable to what entire world spends on supporting mathematical sciences. Yet people who developed his toolbox are not shareholders of this wealth.

2. She gives way too much for charity.

If not bringing money home is bad enough, giving everything away is even worse. Take any manufactured item: cd player, car, cell phone. If you take away the skin -metal, plastic, wires and human labor to manufacture it - all that is left inside are scientific ideas of the last 100 years. These gadgets drive economies of entire countries yet science that is inside comes for free. It is the tide that raises all boats. This is great but only for a species endowed with some sense of gratitude.

3. She used to be  the prettiest.

One can marry religion, politics, financial industry or simply a big bag of money, and I see that everybody is after these ugly bitches these days. Am I the only one who thinks that science is the fairest of all?

4.  Is she  too sexy?

I love the fact that my computer costs the same as 30 years ago and it is a million times better. But it has created a revolution that swept me away and changed my life. I threw away my records, will soon follow with cd's and dvd's and I have already tossed away countless cell phones. This is a bit frustrating even if every new product brings new exciting features.  Compare to less sexy science and for example look at an ordinary AA battery. My grandma would know how to use it, it is exactly the same in every country on the planet and the main accomplishment of these  years is that it does not leak anymore. And yes, it is probably ten times better than 50 years ago. This is science that everybody can rely on - steady  and incremental progress on an useful and familiar product.

5. Universal language.

She tells me with pride that scientific ideas are the only abstract form of human thought that can be communicated between any two people. Indeed, as long as math is concerned the entire thought process of one person can be simply encoded and subsequently recreated in a head of another person. This is a bit of a miracle, and the process is so reliable that most people accept the results by proxies. Yet, _any_ two people can participate in this - gimme a break! Twenty-five years of university brainwashing is required to prepare one's mind to receive these missives. You can probably do anything with human brain in such time-frame!

6. She is not there when you need her.

In spite of all the hard work she is missing in action more often than before. We need to know if factoring numbers is hard, and if not then come up with better crypto algorithms. The security of large chunk of economy depends on it and  the time is pressing. I bring it up all the time but she says that it is a matter of the right number of people thinking about it - one of them is bound to get it. Easy to say, but where do we find these people when our society is  on the verge of giving up on research and education.

7. She makes wrong people rich.

She is very proud that scientific ideas drive modern world and are largely responsible for the supply of goods, energy, food, etc.  Yet, the accumulation of wealth has to do with the demand not supply side. Since the "scientific DNA" of any two cameras, cars, planes, etc are virtually the same, people who make fortunes on these things are the ones who predict accurately what will sell better. A guy who can anticipate  the most popular car color in five years is probably more valuable then a person who invented  four-stroke engine!

8. She can be scary.

Love is blind, but sometime I have a feeling that my babe is a bit spooky. I bet that if you dissect a corn kernel, eventually you will find the word Monsanto etched somewhere in its DNA. She often gives what you ask for and she is usually standing by if you get in trouble because of it. Just watch for this nuclear power plant behind your house or a bunch of dudes fracking for natural gas around your summer house.

9. We have lost many friends over the years.

She used to be very popular with children, teenagers, and grown-ups.
Jules Verne and  Star Trek were painting such a bright vision of a world driven by rationality that everybody was in love with science.  Everybody thought of her as a solution to their problems. But today it is different - problems of people lie with other people, not with the surrounding reality.

10. Is she faithful?

Lately she hangs out a lot with Computational Science and Data Science and this smacks of conspiracy. These newly found buddies are quite different. They are hip and immensely successful yet their  discoveries - and there are many -  cannot be followed by a human mind. This is because they are dependent on searching through the mountains of data or performing computations at a blazing speed. Either way, a machine is an integral part of the process.  Sit and watch kind of stuff,  but the pictures and animations are spectacular.

Friday, July 1, 2011

Three postdoc applications from Barcelona

On my trip to Barcelona I accidentally came across some post-doctoral applications from  hundred years ago.

Application 1.

Name of the applicant: Pablo Picasso
Preferred postdoc location: Paris, France

Hola, my name is Pablo Picasso and I am 19 years old. I have been painting for several years now and the thought that one day they might build a museum to exhibit my work from this period gives me creeps. Sadly, all I have done so far is rather crummy. The point is that I get really bored listening to my teachers  and often retreat to painting to avoid socially awkward situations. However, I think that I can paint anything and  in any style. I can be symbolic, geometric, realistic or anything else. I can express any human emotion in visual form in many different ways. To wit,  I have studied Velazquez' Las Meninas and I made over forty paintings that render parts of this great work. These are just sketches, some not really finished,  so I hope that they will not end up in the same museum.

Anyway, the postdoc in Paris is what I need to become a real painter. I need to meet great French artists and a lot of interesting women. This is very hard in Barcelona, particularly with my parents being a suspicious bunch and hovering over me all the time.

The part of the application has to do with presentation of the post-doctoral work plan. I am not really such a great planner, but I expect that when I get to Paris I will work a lot. I have been thinking about simple geometry like cubes to utilize in my work but I am not sure how it will work. If this plan is really important then I propose that I will make all my paintings for next year blue. Blue is a color of depression, solitude and mysticism and all of these might  likely be my companions in Paris if my application is granted.

Application 2

Name of the applicant: Joan Miro
Preferred postdoc location: Paris, France

Hola,
my name is Joan Miro and I want to be a painter.  I have been painting since I was 13 but most of the time I have been doing what others told me to and this is not very good. What I really like to do is to doodle, and I wonder if there is a future in such activity. So far my work has not been well received, and I do not even mention doodles.  Friends tell me that I can make living as a tattoo designer but no respectable person would get one so what kind of living is that. Perhaps in a hundred years...

A postdoc in Paris would be a way to get my doodling career started. By meeting more open-minded and more sophisticated colleagues I can get my doodles to be appreciated. I feel that these ideas are simple but quite expressive.  In fact, I often see that the doodles that I make on napkins - and I doodle incessantly - are being put aside between book pages rather than tossed in the dustbin.  Once I get sure-footed I anticipate doodling for the rest of my life. Quite frankly I may change my style a bit every few years but at this point my doodling skills are superior to anyone else's.
In Paris I plan to interact with surrealists, but the main goal is to get my career off the ground. One day I might have a museum with 14,000 of my doodles but it will not happen if I do not go to Paris soon.

Application 3

Name of the applicant: Antoni Gaudi
Preferred postdoc location: Paris, France

Hola,
my name is Antoni Gaudi. I want to be an architect and my parents want me to go to Paris to study. I suspect that they are worried that I will become a religious freak and atmosphere of Paris might be an antidote. I disagree completely, I want to live in Barcelona all my life and I do not like to travel. As far as studying I do not see the point. I think about buildings all the time and I know what there is to know. I design my buildings in my head to the finest detail. I want special bricks, moldings, door handles, furniture and I have neat ideas how to use  them. People complain that I do not care for indoor plumbing, building codes, or fire hazards but these things are not very interesting anyway.  Here is my postdoc plan - a sketch only but I can elaborate on request. I know precisely what I want to build. I expect that all this work will require help of thousands of people and many, many years. This is ok, in fact I suspect that completely different building materials would allow my designs to be executed better. I have something concrete in mind, a plaster like material that can be molded and sets to rock hardness. These might be invented before some of my projects are finished. Another thing that I am really lacking is better computational and modelling tools. I make models in large scale and compute in my head but there ought to be a way to do it symbolically. My math teacher told me about a guy named Babbage who made a computing machine but I never found out more.
I believe that complexity arises by compounding simplicity and in my designs I use the next best thing after a straight line  - a degree two curve.  This is as much as I can handle in my mind, but too much for most of the workers. This may sound arrogant but both better materials and better computational tools ought to exist because my designs require them. I view my ideas as coming straight from nature, everything that I make can be resolved all the way to water and clay and a bit of math that ties it together. Some people tell me that my buildings look like an American amusement park but I do not believe it, even though I have never been to America. Just come closer and look at the details, my works are part of nature just like other God's creatures.

I hope that this application will be denied. I have no need to go anywhere, and I want to get a cathedral started here in Barcelona. I am not sure about financing, but who knows  - maybe one day Chinese will be paying the construction costs.