Traffic Patterns
Chad Orzel decided to spice up one of his recent posts with a throwaway snipe about String Theory:
Neither of those [experiments at RHIC] is going to test string theory, of course, which demotes them to stamp collecting in the minds of some…
Unfortunately, this was not quite the non sequitur he intended it to be. And Clifford Johnson and Moshe Rozali jumped in to set him straight.
Chad responded that the remark was intended as a harmless bit of levity, and an “attempt to drive traffic (because I almost always get a bump in traffic when I talk tabout string theory…).” Which, as far as I’m concerned, is a matter between Chad, his readers and his conscience.
Ordinarily, I would, therefore, not even bring it up, except that it got me to thinking about the temptations of popularity. I was somewhat taken aback by the response to my recent post about Loop Quantum Gravity. With 150 comments (and still counting), the temptation is, clearly, to write a lot more posts about LQG, and fewer posts about the boring stuff I usually write about.
On the other hand, the desires to entertain and to inform are not necessarily congruent. Given the choice, I’m rather strongly in the “inform” camp. I’m afraid I’ve exhausted my current store of intelligent things to say about LQG and so I think I will return you to your regularly-scheduled programming.
In his response to Chad, Moshe pointed to some recent posts of mine on AdS/CFT and RHIC, which reminds me that I intended to post some more on that subject … soon.
Posted by distler at July 11, 2006 12:18 AM