I actually agree with quite a bit of this. (I nearly included a line about pursuing excellence in terms of time allocation, but — it seemed possibly-redundant with some of the other stuff on not making the perfect the enemy of the good, and I couldn’t quickly see how to fit it cleanly into the flow of the post, so I left it and moved on …)
I think it’s important to draw the distinction between perfection and excellence. Broadly speaking, I think people often put too much emphasis on perfection, and often not enough on excellence.
Maybe I shouldn’t have led with the “Anything worth doing, is worth doing right” quote. I do see that it’s closer to perfectionist than excellence-seeking, and I don’t literally agree with it. Though one thing I like about the quote is the corollary: “anything not worth doing right isn’t worth doing” — again something I don’t literally agree with, but something I think captures an important vibe.
I do think people in academia can fail to find the corners they should be cutting. But I also think that they write a lot of papers that (to a first approximation) just don’t matter. I think that academia would be a healthier place if people invested more in asking “what’s the important thing here?” and focusing on that, and not trying to write a paper at all until they thought they could write one with the potential to be excellent.
I actually agree with quite a bit of this. (I nearly included a line about pursuing excellence in terms of time allocation, but — it seemed possibly-redundant with some of the other stuff on not making the perfect the enemy of the good, and I couldn’t quickly see how to fit it cleanly into the flow of the post, so I left it and moved on …)
I think it’s important to draw the distinction between perfection and excellence. Broadly speaking, I think people often put too much emphasis on perfection, and often not enough on excellence.
Maybe I shouldn’t have led with the “Anything worth doing, is worth doing right” quote. I do see that it’s closer to perfectionist than excellence-seeking, and I don’t literally agree with it. Though one thing I like about the quote is the corollary: “anything not worth doing right isn’t worth doing” — again something I don’t literally agree with, but something I think captures an important vibe.
I do think people in academia can fail to find the corners they should be cutting. But I also think that they write a lot of papers that (to a first approximation) just don’t matter. I think that academia would be a healthier place if people invested more in asking “what’s the important thing here?” and focusing on that, and not trying to write a paper at all until they thought they could write one with the potential to be excellent.