Skip to content
By using Twitter’s services you agree to our Cookies Use. We and our partners operate globally and use cookies, including for analytics, personalisation, and ads.
  • Home Home Home, current page.
  • About

Saved searches

  • Remove
  • In this conversation
    Verified accountProtected Tweets @
Suggested users
  • Verified accountProtected Tweets @
  • Verified accountProtected Tweets @
  • Language: English
    • Bahasa Indonesia
    • Bahasa Melayu
    • Català
    • Čeština
    • Dansk
    • Deutsch
    • English UK
    • Español
    • Filipino
    • Français
    • Hrvatski
    • Italiano
    • Magyar
    • Nederlands
    • Norsk
    • Polski
    • Português
    • Română
    • Slovenčina
    • Suomi
    • Svenska
    • Tiếng Việt
    • Türkçe
    • Ελληνικά
    • Български език
    • Русский
    • Српски
    • Українська мова
    • עִבְרִית
    • العربية
    • فارسی
    • मराठी
    • हिन्दी
    • বাংলা
    • ગુજરાતી
    • தமிழ்
    • ಕನ್ನಡ
    • ภาษาไทย
    • 한국어
    • 日本語
    • 简体中文
    • 繁體中文
  • Have an account? Log in
    Have an account?
    · Forgot password?

    New to Twitter?
    Sign up
wellerstein's profile
Alex Wellerstein
Alex Wellerstein
Alex Wellerstein
Verified account
@wellerstein

Tweets

Alex WellersteinVerified account

@wellerstein

Historian of science, secrecy, and nuclear weapons. Professor of STS at @FollowStevens. UC Berkeley alum with a Harvard PhD. NUKEMAP creator. Coder and web dev.

Hoboken, NJ / NYC
blog.nuclearsecrecy.com
Joined September 2011

Tweets

  • © 2019 Twitter
  • About
  • Help Center
  • Terms
  • Privacy policy
  • Imprint
  • Cookies
  • Ads info
Dismiss
Previous
Next

Go to a person's profile

Saved searches

  • Remove
  • In this conversation
    Verified accountProtected Tweets @
Suggested users
  • Verified accountProtected Tweets @
  • Verified accountProtected Tweets @

Promote this Tweet

Block

  • Tweet with a location

    You can add location information to your Tweets, such as your city or precise location, from the web and via third-party applications. You always have the option to delete your Tweet location history. Learn more

    Your lists

    Create a new list


    Under 100 characters, optional

    Privacy

    Copy link to Tweet

    Embed this Tweet

    Embed this Video

    Add this Tweet to your website by copying the code below. Learn more

    Add this video to your website by copying the code below. Learn more

    Hmm, there was a problem reaching the server.

    By embedding Twitter content in your website or app, you are agreeing to the Twitter Developer Agreement and Developer Policy.

    Preview

    Why you're seeing this ad

    Log in to Twitter

    · Forgot password?
    Don't have an account? Sign up »

    Sign up for Twitter

    Not on Twitter? Sign up, tune into the things you care about, and get updates as they happen.

    Sign up
    Have an account? Log in »

    Two-way (sending and receiving) short codes:

    Country Code For customers of
    United States 40404 (any)
    Canada 21212 (any)
    United Kingdom 86444 Vodafone, Orange, 3, O2
    Brazil 40404 Nextel, TIM
    Haiti 40404 Digicel, Voila
    Ireland 51210 Vodafone, O2
    India 53000 Bharti Airtel, Videocon, Reliance
    Indonesia 89887 AXIS, 3, Telkomsel, Indosat, XL Axiata
    Italy 4880804 Wind
    3424486444 Vodafone
    » See SMS short codes for other countries

    Confirmation

     

    Welcome home!

    This timeline is where you’ll spend most of your time, getting instant updates about what matters to you.

    Tweets not working for you?

    Hover over the profile pic and click the Following button to unfollow any account.

    Say a lot with a little

    When you see a Tweet you love, tap the heart — it lets the person who wrote it know you shared the love.

    Spread the word

    The fastest way to share someone else’s Tweet with your followers is with a Retweet. Tap the icon to send it instantly.

    Join the conversation

    Add your thoughts about any Tweet with a Reply. Find a topic you’re passionate about, and jump right in.

    Learn the latest

    Get instant insight into what people are talking about now.

    Get more of what you love

    Follow more accounts to get instant updates about topics you care about.

    Find what's happening

    See the latest conversations about any topic instantly.

    Never miss a Moment

    Catch up instantly on the best stories happening as they unfold.

    1. Ash Jogalekar‏ @curiouswavefn 5 Oct 2018
      • Report Tweet

      So, about that academic hoax: I think people who are saying it's no big deal to get shoddy papers published in journals of varying quality are missing the point. The problem is that there are no objective criteria to distinguish between shoddy and sound work in this fields.

      4 replies 3 retweets 12 likes
      Show this thread
    2. Ash Jogalekar‏ @curiouswavefn 5 Oct 2018
      • Report Tweet

      There's no doubt that shoddy science gets published in "hard" science journals, but it's usually possible at least in principle to weed it out. But when your paper is based on opinion rather than statistics or data, my guess about its merit can be as good as yours.

      2 replies 2 retweets 7 likes
      Show this thread
    3. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein 5 Oct 2018
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @curiouswavefn

      1) There are different standards of evidence in different fields, including different fields of science. 2) These fields aren't pretending to be science (unlike some fields...). 3) Peer review sucks for catching deliberate fraud, including in hard sciences.

      2 replies 0 retweets 3 likes
    4. Ash Jogalekar‏ @curiouswavefn 5 Oct 2018
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @wellerstein

      But I think part of the question here is precisely regarding the definition of those standards; if they are so all over the place that it's virtually impossible to even define what a "good" and a "bad" paper is, then isn't your field in trouble? The 2nd point I am sympathetic to.

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
    5. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein 5 Oct 2018
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @curiouswavefn

      I don't think one can conclude from a few editors being fooled by deliberate frauds that these fields have truly no sense of what makes a good paper — this is an epistemological and sociological claim that well exceeds the evidence.

      3 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
    6. Ash Jogalekar‏ @curiouswavefn 5 Oct 2018
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @wellerstein

      Do you feel the same way about the original Sokal hoax?

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
    7. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein 6 Oct 2018
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @curiouswavefn

      Even more so, to be honest. Social Text deliberately took a non-gatekeeper approach, relying exclusively on the notion that Sokal's merit was based in his expertise as a physicist. He abused that.

      2 replies 0 retweets 1 like
    8. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein 6 Oct 2018
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @wellerstein @curiouswavefn

      One can argue whether or not ST's non-gatekeeper strategy is useful or not. (I have been part of "non-gatekeeper"-run conferences and I find them kind of pointless, but that's a personal preference, not a rigorous epistemology.) But they're just one journal, not an entire field.

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
    9. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein 6 Oct 2018
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @wellerstein @curiouswavefn

      It also doesn't mean I have to love the field of "critical theory." I don't. I've read enough of it to have a sense of what it does (I did a subfield of my general exams in "critical history," so I'm not a total noob here). Sometimes it's useful, sometimes it's not.

      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
      Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein 6 Oct 2018
      • Report Tweet
      Replying to @wellerstein @curiouswavefn

      But I would never base my criticism on mere "stunts" or even, frankly, individual "scandals." Because fields are composed of more than those things. One does not dismiss all of physics just because N-rays turned out to be false and it took awhile to figure that out, either.

      8:43 AM - 6 Oct 2018
      1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
        1. Alex Wellerstein‏Verified account @wellerstein 6 Oct 2018
          • Report Tweet
          Replying to @wellerstein @curiouswavefn

          There are substantive criticisms that can be made of obscurantist fields of work in the academy. I don't think these kinds of cheap stunts provide that — they provide only cheap criticisms. And they waste a lot of people's time.

          0 replies 0 retweets 0 likes
          Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. Undo
          Undo

      Loading seems to be taking a while.

      Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.

        Promoted Tweet

        false

        • © 2019 Twitter
        • About
        • Help Center
        • Terms
        • Privacy policy
        • Imprint
        • Cookies
        • Ads info