(d) What inspired them to spend the best part of their lives to research and
share their findings?
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Answer:
:mark me as brainleast plzz
Explanation:
The inventions inspired them to spend the best part of their lives
Explanation:
NANBA..
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Asked 18th Apr, 2014
Ashmit Singh
Ashmit Singh
Freelancer#
What are the lifestyle's of researchers and how do they manage their time?
How do other researchers manage their time? I always feel that I have to compromise a lot with my personal life for doing research. I want to do many things in my personal life but always have pressure to finish my work. I spend more that half of a day on computer doing research stuff. Sometimes the things work, sometimes not, and I have to repeat them. So many tasks are always pending in my personal to-do list for months. How do you all balance your personal and professional life?
Scientific Research
Time Management
Work-Life Balance
Bioinformatics and Computational Biology
Quality of Life Research
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Scientific progress and the COVID-19 pandemic
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14th Sep, 2018
Ataul Karim Patwary
Universiti Utara Malaysia
Well explained by Prof. Julian Echave
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20th Jun, 2014
Julian Echave
National University of General San Martín
I think this is not a problem just for science, but of our present culture that emphasizes "productivity" rather than "quality".
In the case of science, it takes the form of the current "publish-or-perish" culture, which pushes people to work too much and publish publish publish, at the cost of at best incremental contributions, rather than ground-breaking. We find it difficult to slow down, take time to think over things, let problems cook in the back-burner slowly until they "solve themselves" etc. I'm convinced that in the case of science, working harder and longer hours is just counterproductive in terms of the significance of the scientific contributions made. Significant questions are just hard and take time: not only time at the lab, or at the computer, but "idle" time when you do other things, relax, and let ideas slowly combine and recombine, at their own tempo. You might want to look at the "slow science" movement, among others, that has emerged as a reaction to what has been called the "MacDonalization of science".
We would make ourselves and other scientists (editors, reviewers, and readers) a really big favor if we just published less and better work, which would necessarily mean that we devote more time away from the lab or the computer.
In a word, the "publish-or-perish" pressure is turning into "publish-and-perish".
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18th Apr, 2014
Federico Del Giorgio Solfa
Universidad Nacional de La Plata
I feel the same, with the added difficulty that I have other professional activities to achieve the standard of living that desire. Still can not find my personal balance!
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18th Apr, 2014
Francisco J. Enguita
University of Lisbon
I agree with you guys.... however this is not surprising to me. Remember that being a scientist is a full time job, a way of living, a style.... like being an artist or a musician you will have your work all the time with you...
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18th Apr, 2014
Svetlozar Velizarov
Universidade NOVA de Lisboa
Exactly, a scientist is not a common job, but a way of living...!
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18th Apr, 2014
Rita De Vuyst
Afkikker/Klimop
I did a lot of research which was intertwined with life in general so I don't feel that pressure. It's very spontaneously that I came to some results because it has to do with intuition and direct action.
Life and research are the same kind of flow.
Synchronicities you can't force they just happen.
There is a lot to think about why such things happen, which direction it is going and who is responding.
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