• The Scientist

    Life and Times of a permanently bemused British postdoc in exile.

    • Designer labels

      Friday, 09 May 2008 - 02:40 GMT

      There is an incredibly smart lecturer in our department (there are, indeed, several such; I’m concentrating on but one of them) who nonetheless managed to say in a lab-meeting

      ”... these four-helix bundles are designed to bind substrate …”

      I have no reason to believe that the chap is a closet IDer, but please, won’t someone think of the children?

      Last updated: Friday, 09 May 2008 - 02:40 GMT

      • Comments

        • Date:
          Friday, 09 May 2008 - 04:11 GMT
          Bob O'Hara said:

          Are you denying His Noodly Goodness?

        • Date:
          Friday, 09 May 2008 - 06:52 GMT
          Jennifer Rohn said:

          There is a long history of anthropomorphizing molecular interactions in scientific narrative, usually to make the story more engaging. Personally I think it’s harmless, as long as everyone knows what is meant.

        • Date:
          Friday, 09 May 2008 - 07:08 GMT
          Richard Grant said:

          Naw. I prefer to say we’re doomed, DOOMED in my best Hugo Weaving voice.

        • Date:
          Friday, 09 May 2008 - 16:42 GMT
          Cath Ennis said:

          Oh this drives me crazy. It’s just laziness. It’s all well and good between scientists, but then by the time you start talking to lay people it’s become a habit.

        • Date:
          Friday, 09 May 2008 - 19:08 GMT
          Jennifer Rohn said:

          As I’ve said elsewhere – you need to know your audience. I think compartmentalization is fine, and I think amongst colleagues, you should be able to relax.

        • Date:
          Friday, 09 May 2008 - 19:43 GMT
          Maxine Clarke said:

          Hugo Weaving? He only does trilogies, you know.

        • Date:
          Saturday, 10 May 2008 - 22:18 GMT
          Rus Bowden said:

          Wait till the guys over at The Discovery Institute hear about this! Whoa!

          Other than them (and seriously including them), however, I think the intructor communicated well by his use of the English language. (This, as long as he never says, “Oh my God” when taken by a result.)

          It’s a fairly common lexical device that children as well as lab associates would recognize the meaning of upon hearing, so no need to worry about the audience. But, sometimes I think the English language was designed to create debates for being taken too literally.

          When we use “design” like this, it is to create a wonderment about what the actual mechanisms were or are. That associate of yours was made to lecture.

          Yours,
          Rus

        • Date:
          Monday, 12 May 2008 - 20:40 GMT
          Audra McKinzie said:

          I take your side on this one. It is dangerous diction. Whilst I agree that one should be able to relax among colleagues, (hmm, maybe I don’t truly agree with that – backstabbers!) there are still malleable minds in a lab meeting. Bad habits seem natural when embodied by incredibly smart lecturers.

          However, since language is a flexible tool, perhaps the solution is to stretch the definition of the word ‘designed’ to embrace the processes of trial and error that yield desirable end results such as a substrate binding site or Hugo Weaving, thus simply eliminating the dependence upon a ‘designer’?


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