Ivan Flis
@iflis.bsky.social
440 followers 550 following 380 posts
Psychologist turncoat | history of science, history of psychology, philosophy of science | PhD from Utrecht University | Postdoc at University of Rijeka, Croatia: https://revenant.uniri.hr/ | Teaching in the cognitive sciences https://cogsci.uniri.hr/
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Reposted by Ivan Flis
Reposted by Ivan Flis
iansudbery.bsky.social
I wish more people got this. Science is inefficient. I'd say probably say inherently inefficient. I know we all want to hurry up and make the world a better place with those tax dollars, but I believe the harder we try to rush things, the less effective we will be in the long run.
markrubin.bsky.social
"Science is not broken, and it most certainly is not dying. It is an inefficient human activity....When we catastrophize, we feed a disillusionment which political actors can weaponize to get rid of scientific evidence they find inconvenient."

#AcademicSky 🧪
quaxquax.bsky.social
Difficult for me to put into words how disappointed I am in Sabine Hossenfelder. Many years back when she was just blogging about physics I was a huge fan, and she published a lot of intriguing papers. Now she makes money as a social media arsonist. 🧪
www.mcgill.ca/oss/article/...
iflis.bsky.social
International programs bring the world to the university and everyone benefits.
iflis.bsky.social
It’s not only about revenue. We started the first program in English at our faculty a few years ago, and the international cohorts of students produce a completely different learning and teaching atmosphere that would be available to local students only if they moved abroad.
djvanness.bsky.social
A lot of people think that every international student admitted means one fewer spot for domestic students, when the opposite is more likely true - the tuition revenue international students bring allows public universities to provide substantial discounts to domestic students, improving access.
nickfleisher.bsky.social
30% drop year over year!
iflis.bsky.social
Trazio sam one pingvine iz spota za Dramu od Let 3, ali ovo americko
smece nema takvih gifova.
iflis.bsky.social
Jesi ga bar zblokala? S tim debilom sam se jos na tviteru porijeckao i zblokirao ga, nisam znao da se i tu metastazirao. Najvolim ih “nisam seksist, ali…” i “ja imam zenskih prijatelja.”
iflis.bsky.social
I think we need to ressurect political nihilism as an analysis category to explain what is happening in the United States.
clbergpowers.bsky.social
I actually think it's off base for the descriptor of these angry young white men who think violence is cool and/or funny to be "non-political." They are making rape jokes and saying racist things and wanting to sow chaos. That's literally the Alex Jones, Steve Bannon playbook.
wajali.bsky.social
@kenklippenstein.bsky.social with the receipts, actually talking to the shooter's friends.

Surprise! Not the left, or even MAGA. Another white kid who spent countless hours online and "was an edgelord who wanted someone to get blamed … to rile people up.”

www.kenklippenstein.com/p/the-ice-sh...
Reposted by Ivan Flis
anitaleirfall.bsky.social
Review of Philosophy and Psychology Article

Epistemic Challenges Faced by Non-native English Speakers in Philosophy: Evidence from link.springer.com/article/10.1...
Epistemic Challenges Faced by Non-native English Speakers in Philosophy: Evidence from an International Survey - Review of Philosophy and Psychology
The widespread use of English in the field of philosophy facilitates international collaboration but may also pose significant challenges in understanding, analyzing, or producing information for both native (NES) and non-native English speakers (NNES). These challenges have not yet been systematically investigated. We conducted an international survey of philosophers (N = 1,615), comparing NES and NNES, while controlling for their academic position (e.g., student, staff, etc.) and other relevant variables. Responses indicated that NNES needed up to twice as long as NES to read English articles and nearly twice as long to prepare English presentations. Additionally, even NNES with the highest English proficiency reported significantly more English manuscript rejections, greater avoidance of attending or asking questions at philosophy events in English, and more frequent feelings of ridicule for their English use. No statistically significant difference was observed in the reported time required to complete an English draft, but NNES tended to report shorter times, possibly reflecting greater reliance on external assistance to detect linguistic errors. Finally, while extensive use of English may help NNES overcome difficulties with English, 88% of NNES respondents reported that it also reduced their ability to discuss philosophy in their native language. This study provides the first systematic, quantitative evidence of English-related epistemic challenges that many NNES may face in philosophy, highlighting significant linguistic inequities.
link.springer.com
iflis.bsky.social
We are so blessed that the Age of Reason produced both chemistry and gender essentialism.
iflis.bsky.social
The fact that (some) social scientists don’t see this as an issue is beyond worrying for their communities.
iflis.bsky.social
Is analytical flexibility really the biggest problem while you’re confusing the ephemeral statistical effects of psychological processes with the ephemeral statistical effects of language prediction trained on massive data sets? Hah.
iflis.bsky.social
I realized my perspective was becoming super weird when I cringed at mturk sampled research. Had no clue what was in store for quantified social science.
jamiecummins.bsky.social
Can large language models stand in for human participants?
Many social scientists seem to think so, and are already using "silicon samples" in research.

One problem: depending on the analytic decisions made, you can basically get these samples to show any effect you want.

THREAD 🧵
The threat of analytic flexibility in using large language models to simulate human data: A call to attention
Social scientists are now using large language models to create "silicon samples" - synthetic datasets intended to stand in for human respondents, aimed at revolutionising human subjects research. How...
arxiv.org
iflis.bsky.social
I feel seen
micahgallen.com
Taps side of head… can’t get bored if I never truly specialize!
kai-arzheimer.com
Want some free career advice? #AcademicChatter
Reposted by Ivan Flis
ctimmermann.bsky.social
Historian of science here: it’s worth pointing out that getting paid for doing research is a fairly recent thing. William Harvey did his research as a hobby, as it were. So did Charles Darwin.
iflis.bsky.social
It’s just that the bar for appropriate evidence is so high, as is the complexity of what is being explained, that most of these sets of ideas are just crazy.
iflis.bsky.social
On a more positive note - when the crazy set of ideas that latches onto reality in a weird way does somehow work, you get insight (or dare I say knowledge).
iflis.bsky.social
Have I mentioned how much I hate airports? Airline agents or no agents included.
iflis.bsky.social
This is the second time an airline has sent me to an airport to talk to one of their agents only to realize the airport in question had no agents from the said airline working that day. Is it me?!? (different airline, different airport, different country!)
Reposted by Ivan Flis
markrubin.bsky.social
Index Joke!

“Lakatos’ assistant, Bellamy, was not amused and decided to play an 'anti-Paul' joke on Feyerabend in the index entry for 'rhetoric,' which directs readers to pages 1–309.”

www.miskatonic.org/2025/08/20/f...

#PhilSci
In 1975, for example, Alex Bellamy created the index for the first edition of Paul Feyerabend’s book, Against Method. Ironically, Bellamy was working at the time for/with Imre Lakatos, to whom Feyerabend had “playfully” dedicated his book (although the two scholars were locked in an infamous and protracted debate about the philosophy of science and research methodologies). Lakatos’ assistant, Bellamy, was not amused and decided to play an “anti-Paul” joke on Feyerabend in the index entry for “rhetoric,” which directs readers to pages 1–309. Subsequent editions of the book contained a completely different index, sans “rhetoric 1–309.”
iflis.bsky.social
Imaju i Britanci svoj HAZU.
philipcball.bsky.social
The debate around Musk and the Royal Society is just so frustrating. If those who think it is right to retain him as an FRS were to say "Here, despite his having been a direct accomplice to the dismantling of scientific institutions, destruction of scientific data, spreading of...