In the scramble for the next grant, employment contract or journal paper, many academics will be familiar with a sense of dispiritedly grinding along on a career treadmill with opportunities few and seemingly far out of reach.
But what if early career researchers were given a couple of years topause and ask: in the grand sweep of human history the next century, millennium or even billions of years what questions are really worth tackling?
This is the goal of the Research Scholars Programme, a kind of career oasis offered by the University of Oxfords grandly named Future of Humanity Institute (FHI).
There can be a lot of pressure in academic careers, said Owen Cotton-Barratt, the programmes director. And there can be asense that youve got to keep moving, find something productive, and Ithink that people dont look so farup.
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The FHI, set up in 2005 by the philosopher Nick Bostrom, has received plenty of attention for its work on threats that could wipe out humanity, be they runaway artificial intelligence or pandemics unleashed by advances in biotechnology.
Its focus, though, is not just on existential risks, but also on how to build a flourishing long-term future for humanity, perhaps among the stars the FHI has researchers looking at future legal systems in space, or investigating why we appear to be alone in the universe.
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The Research Scholars Programme, whose third cohort starts next month, gives early career researchers two years to think about what is called macrostrategy. This is the art of taking decisions now like keeping in check new technologies that might wipe us out thatmighthave a positive impact on humanity far into the future. Fully salaried,the rolesare explicitly aimed at scholars who are thinking of doing a PhD or taking a postdoctoral position but are unsure which of their many ideas are worth pursuing.
The genesis of the programme was the realisation that very few academics at the FHI had a kind of straight academic path to what they are working on right now, said Dr Cotton-Barratt, who has himself pivoted from a purely mathematical PhD to more philosophical questions about moral uncertainty.
If we think these topics are really important, shouldnt there be better ways to arrive at people working on them? he asked. Shouldnt individuals thinking about their research careers have more opportunity early on to step back and say: OK,how can Ithink about whats important to workon?
One of the problems with academic careers, argued Dr Cotton-Barratt, was that researchers were funnelled into well-trodden fields and problems that have a ready-made ecosystem of grants, supervisors and respect from peers working on the same questions.
But theres a bit of a chicken and egg problem for questions that are important but not yet being tackled, he said, as peers are slower to giveindependently minded scholarscredit for taking such a problem on.
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Carina Prunkl was one of the first cohort of research scholars, who started in 2018. She used the two years to move away from her PhD in the philosophy of physics and is now a postdoc at Oxfords Institute for Ethics inAI an area she thinks will be of crucial importance in the 21st century.
It seemed to me a way of applying my skillsto have a positive impact on the world, rather than sitting in my armchair and thinking about black holes, she said.
The programme gave me the freedom to think about what Iwas actually interestedin, she said. Especially after aPhD, its hard to change your research focus. Not all of her cohort continued in academia one founded a non-governmental organisation.
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To some academics, the FHIs agenda might sound uncomfortably focused on real-world impact albeit on a sometimes galactic timescale just as governments are perceived to be squeezing the space for purely curiosity-driven research.
Dr Cotton-Barratt agreed that academics often did their best work when motivated by curiosity, not impact. But Ithink we need to make more spaces to get their curiosity interested in the big important topics, in a way that isnt so much under pressure, he said, and argued that many more universities and departments could benefit from a similar scheme.
A whole two years to think about your research direction was admittedly a relatively extreme version, he admitted. But even a more prosaically focused engineering department, say, could gain a lot of value from running a week-long conference on blue-sky thinking, he said.
If we turned away from the stuff were normally in the weeds of, what other grand ambitions could we be going for? he asked.
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POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: Time out lets scholars minds wander around big questions
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