Sabine Hossenfelder writes in Aeon about monetizing interactions with crank mathematicians and physicists.

Sabine Hossenfelder  writes in Aeon about monetizing interactions with crank mathematicians and physicists. Hossenfelder paints a sympathetic picture of math and physics cranks as well-intentioned but deeply misguided amateurs who have been lead astray by poor science communication.

The majority of my callers are the ones who seek advice for an idea they’ve tried to formalise, unsuccessfully, often for a long time. Many of them are retired or near retirement, typically with a background in engineering or a related industry. All of them are men. Many base their theories on images, downloaded or drawn by hand, embedded in long pamphlets. A few use basic equations. Some add videos or applets. Some work with 3D models of Styrofoam, cardboard or wires. The variety of their ideas is bewildering, but these callers have two things in common: they spend an extraordinary amount of time on their theories, and they are frustrated that nobody is interested.

....

I still get the occasional joke from colleagues about my ‘crackpot consultant business’, but I’ve stopped thinking of our clients that way. They are driven by the same desire to understand nature and make a contribution to science as we are. They just weren’t lucky enough to get the required education early in life, and now they have a hard time figuring out where to even begin. At the same time, the physicists on my team like to help others understand more about science and appreciate the opportunity to apply their knowledge outside academia. In connecting both sides, everybody wins.

https://aeon.co/ideas/what-i-learned-as-a-hired-consultant-for-autodidact-physicists

Comments

  1. John Baez famously created a scoring system for mathematical cranks, which is really an index of delusional ideation.

    math.ucr.edu - Crackpot index

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