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I am a set theorist. Since I began to study this subject, I became increasingly aware of negative attitudes about it. These were expressed both from an internal and an external perspective. By the “internal perspective,” I mean a constant expression of worry from set theorists and logicians about the relevance of their work to the broader community / “real world”, with these worries sometimes leading to career-defining decisions on the direction of research.

For me, this situation is unwanted. I studied set theory because I thought it was interesting, not because I wanted to be a soldier in some kind of movement. Furthermore, I don’t see why an area needs defending when it produces a lot of deep theorems. That part is hard enough.

To what degree does there exist, in the various areas of mathematics, a widespread feeling of pressure to defend the relevance of the whole subject? Are there some areas in which it is enough to pursue the research that is considered interesting, useful, or important by experts in the field? Of course there will always be a demand to explain “broader impacts” to funding agencies, but I am talking about situations where the pressure comes from one’s own colleagues or even one’s own internalized sense of what is proper research.

Monroe Eskew
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17 Answers17

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Overall, people in academia in general and mathematicians in particular are very lucky in being free to study (and being able to make a good living) according to the standards of their discipline, without feeling pressure to defend the relevance of their whole subject. In fact even within our disciplines we have a lot of freedom to pursue our individual visions and tastes. (To appreciate how lucky we are compare the situation with musicians, writers, artists, film directors, actors, ...)

Relations with other areas of mathematics or outside mathematics are nice but they are one (and not necessarily a major one) among variety of criteria to appreciate mathematical progress.

I think we do have some duty to try to explain what we are doing outside our community and even outside the mathematical community. (But also this task is easier in some areas and harder in others.)

Another thing that I found useful in similar contexts is the "sure thing principle". Given an unwanted situation that has no implication on your action why worry about it at all too much. For example, suppose a paper you wrote and regard as a good paper is rejected. If the rejection was unjust then the conclusion is: "Improve your paper", and if the rejection was just then the conclusion is "Improve your paper".

Gil Kalai
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    +1 but not sure about the last paragraph. The hope is that by discussing it, I can either get some feedback that allows me to understand and accept the situation, or move some logicians to be a little less self-deprecating. – Monroe Eskew Apr 28 '19 at 08:51
  • @MonroeEskew, you are correct! I was carried away a little, so I updated my answer. Discussions and understanding can be useful even in cases where the sure-thing strategy is a good first approximation. – Gil Kalai Apr 28 '19 at 09:19
  • Ok but I still don’t get your point. There are logicians who make decisions on the direction of research according whether they think it will be seen as relevant by a larger group. So I’m wondering if i should join them in this practice or whether they should relax and do what’s interesting. – Monroe Eskew Apr 28 '19 at 09:26
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    My point is that you should relax and do what’s interesting and important to the best of your judgement. – Gil Kalai Apr 28 '19 at 09:52
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    One more comment: With regard to the artists etc, we can be sure that no one will ask them if it has applications. What counts the most is whether people like it or not, and this can be affected by the amount of expertise or experience of the critic. The artist (or critics) can also add to a work's appeal by explaining why the work is especially original or was challenging to produce, or just situate in a historical or personal context in such a way that adds interest. Now these ways of adding to an artistic work's appeal are nearly the same kinds of things that may add to a mathematical – Monroe Eskew Apr 28 '19 at 15:31
  • (cont)... work's appeal. The artist, though of course typically less well-paid than the mathematician, at least has the benefit of having the modes of valuation of their work fairly transparent, most of which are unapologetically subjective. The pure mathematician on the other hand has to sometimes deal with "broader impacts" criteria that purport to be objective but which may not be when thoroughly examined. – Monroe Eskew Apr 28 '19 at 15:34
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    If you write a paper you think is good, it gets rejected, and you're confident that the rejection was the result of (say) prejudice against your field or against some group the reviewer rightly or wrongly thinks you belong to -- then the conclusion may be not "improve your paper" but "submit it somewhere else that may use different reviewers". – Gareth McCaughan Apr 29 '19 at 09:08
  • @GarethMcCaughan What I meant was both "improve your paper" and "submit it somewhere else". Let me emphasize that I think it is ok (more than that, it is part of the job) if people have views and judgement about the relative merit of different fields, different directions, different individuals, and different works. – Gil Kalai Apr 29 '19 at 13:30
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    When I was a student, applications were looked down upon. "Applied mathematics" was - almost - a dirty word. You wouldn't even dream of defending what you did, theorems should have a value in itself (I was then also interested in applications). It is almost ironic that since then the fashion pendulum has swung to the other side. Today, woe to whom would have no - even so harebrained - application scenario in mind. Today the dirty word is "pure"/"blu-sky" science. Lesson learnt? I sacrifice the occasional lamb(da) to the prevalent fashion, and ignore it as much as possible beyond that. – Captain Emacs Apr 29 '19 at 13:34
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    In his paper ``The future of set theory'', Saharon Shelah starts with the following:

    We shall now try to discuss some relevant axes of interest – so ideally, for each such axis, the people in the area are divided in a meaningful way (the number of exclamation marks reflect my view of how much this motivates my own work).

    AXIS A: Source of interest

    – Mohammad Golshani Apr 30 '19 at 12:07
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  • foundations/applications to philosophy !

  • applications to mathematics !!!

  • historical reasons !!!

  • inner developments !!!!

  • beauty !!!!!!!!!

  • proof with “bones” or at least “meat” !!!!!

  • generality !!!!!!

  • sport (added by popular demand) !!!

  • – Mohammad Golshani Apr 30 '19 at 12:07
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    To the last paragraph: the conclusion in each case may indeed be "improve your paper," but that glosses over what constitutes an "improvement" and what kind of "improvements" each situation signals. – Neal Apr 30 '19 at 20:20