@namark it's almost like cyber security!
@bonifartius it was more of a jab at freemo (and his "now let's drive engineers away from this instance" post), I know no other data scientists. The definition though does seems rather pointless. "Looks at data to make sense of it". Well duh who doesn't? Might be just a polite way to say a know-it-all.
I mean Data science is an actual degree, and a profession. We have whole scientific journals devoted to data science.
And the only engineers I'd be driving away by calling out bad engineers are the bad ones. No regrets there, more than happy to keep the good ones.
If anyone reads me complaining about bad engineers and thinks "He is insulting me"... then they must think they are one of the bad engineers then.
I certainly could have been more explicit. But saying "engineers" rather than "some engineers" no more implies all engineers than ti does some, it is ambiguous in that regard.
I think the most reasonable interpretation, and in fact the one I meant, would be "most engineers". I think people would be grasping if they took what i said and insisted that i meant every single engineer without an exception in the world. I think most would take it to mean exactly what I intended, that engineers understanding the deeper theory is a rarity.
@freemo I jab out of love.
No worries, I'm not very easily insulted anyway. I'd rather you be honest and mean than dishonest and kind. Even if i dont always agree with your opinions they are still your genuine opinions so I'm ok with it.
@freemo @namark but isn't that part of the point with engineers vs. scientists? in germany there is a difference in university for scientists and "university of applied sciences" for engineers. and to be honest, i wouldn't want scientists to build bridges etc. 😉 engineers seem to have a bit broader knowledge, but not as deep as scientists, which prepares them better for real life building things. scientists are specialized and advance their respective fields, while engineers think of ways to combine these things then.
Generally speaking, yes, that is the difference..I agree I dont want scientist building bridges anymore than I want engineers defining bridge building theory. The issue I find is that the separation of concerns here might mean that engineers are better at building bridges, yes, but not as good as they could be at doing so. Similarly it means scientists are better at defining bridge building theories but not as good as they would be.
Ideally there would be no distinction in education (just in how they want to apply their education) and people who build bridges would be experts in the theory and the application, as would the people defining the theories.
Now for bridges it isnt as big a deal because building new novel types of bridges that behave in radically different ways than we are used to is something that almost never happens, so the separation there isnt as critical as it is in other fields where dealing with edge cases are more common place such as computer and electrical engineering.
@freemo I must not know the language then. Though I more convinced that your agenda indeed is to attract only the ones that would fall madly in love with you.
@bonifartius