For scientists, the right questions are often the hardest - FT中文网
登录×
电子邮件/用户名
密码
记住我
请输入邮箱和密码进行绑定操作:
请输入手机号码,通过短信验证(目前仅支持中国大陆地区的手机号):
请您阅读我们的用户注册协议隐私权保护政策,点击下方按钮即视为您接受。
观点 科学

For scientists, the right questions are often the hardest

The most difficult problems can nurture the most talented researchers
00:00

{"text":[[{"start":null,"text":"

"}],[{"start":8.59,"text":"The writer is a science commentator"}],[{"start":10.89,"text":"Science students at Harvard University already belong to an elite but, this term, there is a super-elite among them. Fifteen have been selected to ruminate on major unsolved enigmas, such as how life sprang from nonliving matter or whether it is truly possible to reverse ageing."}],[{"start":35.18,"text":"The Genuinely Hard Problems scheme, designed to expose bright young minds each week to the world’s biggest unanswered questions, might usefully chart a course for other institutions to follow. According to Logan McCarty, a Harvard science lecturer and dean of education who is organising the classes with the scheme’s creator, neurobiology professor Jeff Lichtman, the internet and AI have lessened the need for ambitious thinkers to acquire specialised technical skills and internalise vast quantities of information."}],[{"start":75.88,"text":"Instead, McCarty told me, they should be seeking to understand human society and its problems: “Prepare students to ask, ‘how can we use science’ and ‘what should we do with science’, not just ‘how to do science’.” The initiative raises profound questions about the future of science education in the age of AI, including whether there should be a greater role for the humanities and social sciences."}],[{"start":104.42999999999999,"text":"Conventional scientific training can often seem like a rabbit hole, with researchers burrowing deep into narrow fields. Specialist knowledge can now be digitally retrieved in seconds; AI can mine data, construct hypotheses and design experiments. On top of that, a slender scholarly lens can obscure a wider perspective. Today, some of the biggest problems facing humanity, such as climate change and energy scarcity, tend to sprawl across disciplines rather than sit snugly within academic departments."}],[{"start":144.70999999999998,"text":"The primary task of scientists, the Harvard educators believe, is asking the right questions, because AI can answer even difficult queries if they are well-posed; being fearless and willing to fail, with no area of science off-limits; and doing research that is meaningful and has impact, rather than chasing quick wins."}],[{"start":170.90999999999997,"text":"With that in mind, the GHP cohorts — 15 this semester, and another 15 in the spring — were selected from about 160 applicants purely on the strength of their curiosity, not prior achievements. Each week, a guest lecturer describes a conundrum that has defied solution: perhaps a mathematical mystery that has endured for centuries; or the uncharted link between brain structure and mental health."}],[{"start":205.85999999999996,"text":"Students will pick one enigma to work on during their undergraduate years and perhaps beyond. Will Harvard’s bet on those who are curious rather than always correct pay off? “We’ll know in about 10-15 years, when the first of these students wins a Nobel Prize,” McCarty says, boldly. "}],[{"start":229.33999999999995,"text":"Nick Lane is an evolutionary biochemist and author at University College London who works on one of those Genuinely Hard Problems: the origins of life. He uses AI to probe the border between the known and unknown, unveiling new areas for research, and agrees with the central idea that science education needs to change: “In the age of AI, which sees patterns in the data we already have, making real scientific advances will put a premium on unconstrained originality, hard thinking and creativity — to see what is unknown and unthought.”"}],[{"start":272.17999999999995,"text":"But that did not negate the importance of traditional learning, such as how to write an essay without AI, which teaches students how to structure information. That skill, he said, allows students to see where an answer might lie, and trains them to spot incoherencies and contradictions."}],[{"start":293.85999999999996,"text":"He also cautioned against the conceit that long-standing mysteries just need a clever person to see the light or come up with a single equation (excepting Einstein, presumably). For example, there is more to the origin of life than, say, just building a nucleotide; complex answers need experts from different disciplines to flesh out the bigger picture: “There has to be a licence to rove between disciplines, but if everyone did it we’d be in a real mess.” Without an army of scientists to keep order, of course, there would be no disciplines to cross."}],[{"start":336.48999999999995,"text":"Still, a 2024 Royal Society report, “Science in the age of AI”, saw that the skills and competencies of researchers needed to adapt. Its lead author, Oxford university engineer Alison Noble, said the ultimate goal was for “humans and AI [to] work together to advance our understanding of the world beyond what either could achieve alone”."}],[{"start":364.56999999999994,"text":"Now, that would be quite the landmark moment: AI helping humanity to finally work out how life began."}],[{"start":374.0999999999999,"text":"Letter in response:"}],[{"start":376.0899999999999,"text":"Elite institutions cannot be sole curators of the science agenda / From Stefaan Verhulst, Research Professor, Tandon School of Engineering, New York University"}],[{"start":398.5099999999999,"text":""}]],"url":"https://audio.ftcn.net.cn/album/a_1764601918_7844.mp3"}

版权声明:本文版权归FT中文网所有,未经允许任何单位或个人不得转载,复制或以任何其他方式使用本文全部或部分,侵权必究。

电力短缺的古巴加深对中国太阳能技术的依赖

太阳能技术进口激增,在该国几乎遭遇全面石油封锁之际带来了一些缓解。

为何这次石油冲击与以往不同

各国政府和央行已无政策弹药来遏制这场经济冲击。

让科技去探索选民真正的诉求

对动机与情感强度的新洞见,或可让民主运作得更好。

Maga会继续支持特朗普对伊朗的战争吗?

在佐治亚州小镇的街头,总统的基本盘力挺这场战争,而摇摆选民却举棋不定。

马拉多纳理论下,市场是否已收得过紧

欧洲方面在3月释放的鹰派信号已起到收紧货币政策的效果。

中国微短剧出海美国,用熟悉套路争夺手机用户

在中国炙手可热的一种类型中,爱恋与幻想题材占据主导,而该类型正尝试迎合西方观众的口味。
设置字号×
最小
较小
默认
较大
最大
分享×