BRFR Cake Stop 'breaking news' miscellany

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briantrumpet

briantrumpet

Timewaster
Maybe one in Cornish next... one the one hand, why shouldn't someone write a PhD thesis in their native langauge... but OTOH, I guess it depends if you want other chemists to read it.

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secretsqirrel

Über Member
Maybe one in Cornish next... one the one hand, why shouldn't someone write a PhD thesis in their native langauge... but OTOH, I guess it depends if you want other chemists to read it.

View attachment 15344

It‘s just a language……

I bet science is written in 100s of different languages.
 
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briantrumpet

briantrumpet

Timewaster
I was going to say. I wrote all my notes, exams, lab reports and final dissertation of my physics degree in Galician. There weren't many of us, but I wasn't the only one.

My feeling would be that for a Bachelor's degree, you have a very limited audience - essentially your tutors. Not much different from a Master's. But I'd have thought that for original research – the point of a PhD – you'd want your research to become widely read, and that if you were bilingual, with a widely shared language as one of your languages, choosing a language spoken by 0.01% of the world's population would be limiting, compared with one spoken by 18%. (Gemini)

But maybe not writing in your native language would be 'selling out'. I dunno. But I suspect that most international scientific conferences are likely to tend towards English as the lingua franca, for the most efficient sharing of ideas.
 

secretsqirrel

Über Member
My feeling would be that for a Bachelor's degree, you have a very limited audience - essentially your tutors. Not much different from a Master's. But I'd have thought that for original research – the point of a PhD – you'd want your research to become widely read, and that if you were bilingual, with a widely shared language as one of your languages, choosing a language spoken by 0.01% of the world's population would be limiting, compared with one spoken by 18%. (Gemini)

But maybe not writing in your native language would be 'selling out'. I dunno. But I suspect that most international scientific conferences are likely to tend towards English as the lingua franca, for the most efficient sharing of ideas.

Maybe so, but the language of science tends have classical latin and greek roots, which Welsh will adopt in the same way as English, French, German etc.

And dodgy graphs and diagrams transcend all languages 🤓
 
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briantrumpet

briantrumpet

Timewaster
MAGA has been stoking that.

...and other malign actors, I'm sure. It'll be the same playbook: sow discontent and division, blame politicians who haven't delivered and don't promise easy 'fixes', say that only *this* course of action can deliver unicorns, etc, etc.
 

First Aspect

Legendary Member
Alberta won't separate from Canada.

Doing a PhD in Welsh won't make the science any better, but will ensure no one ever reads it, which will reduce it's value. But llongyfarchiadau anyway.
 
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briantrumpet

briantrumpet

Timewaster
Alberta won't separate from Canada.

Doing a PhD in Welsh won't make the science any better, but will ensure no one ever reads it, which will reduce it's value. But llongyfarchiadau anyway.

It's not that I'm unsympathetic to promoting Welsh in Wales, but it just seems a little odd to me to be using a science PhD study to be doing so, as it seems to be putting the language aspect ahead of the sharing of scientific advancement through knowledge sharing.

Apologies, Gemini again

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briantrumpet

briantrumpet

Timewaster
Often called ‘oil rich Alberta’…..

Aha. I think Eartha Kitt was an inspiration for Trump:

I like Chopin and Bizet
And the songs of yesterday
String quartets and Polynesian carols
But the music that excels
Is the sound of oil wells
As they slurp, slurp, slurp into the barrels

 
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