May 20, 2008

Quotes > Stigler’s Law

“No scientific discovery is named after its original discoverer.”
 -- Stigler's Law

Found in Malcolm Gladwell's piece on the often-parallel nature of scientific discovery.

The statistician Stephen Stigler once wrote an elegant essay about the futility of the practice of eponymy in science—that is, the practice of naming a scientific discovery after its inventor. That’s another idea inappropriately borrowed from the cultural realm. As Stigler pointed out, “It can be found that Laplace employed Fourier Transforms in print before Fourier published on the topic, that Lagrange presented Laplace Transforms before Laplace began his scientific career, that Poisson published the Cauchy distribution in 1824, twenty-nine years before Cauchy touched on it in an incidental manner, and that Bienaymé stated and proved the Chebychev Inequality a decade before and in greater generality than Chebychev’s first work on the topic.” For that matter, the Pythagorean theorem was known before Pythagoras; Gaussian distributions were not discovered by Gauss. The examples were so legion that Stigler declared the existence of Stigler’s Law: “No scientific discovery is named after its original discoverer.” There are just too many people with an equal shot at those ideas floating out there in the ether. We think we’re pinning medals on heroes. In fact, we’re pinning tails on donkeys.

Stigler’s Law was true, Stigler gleefully pointed out, even of Stigler’s Law itself. The idea that credit does not align with discovery, he reveals at the very end of his essay, was in fact first put forth by Merton. “We may expect,” Stigler concluded, “that in years to come, Robert K. Merton, and his colleagues and students, will provide us with answers to these and other questions regarding eponymy, completing what, but for the Law, would be called the Merton Theory of the reward system of science.”

Posted by lesjones | TrackBack



Comments

In the March 2007 Handgunner magazine, an article on the passing of Jeff Cooper by Mas Ayoob specifically addresses this issue with regards to Cooper.

"It was Cooper who defined and promulgated the Weaver the Weaver stance, but he named it after Jack Weaver, whose use of the two-handed hold inspired him. He popularized the handy CW sling, but named it after Carlos Widmann of Guatemala, who shoed it to him. Jeff named the things he advocated after those who made him aware of them. That's the opposite of arrogance."

I would call it "showing class."

Posted by: Mikee at May 23, 2008

In the March 2007 Handgunner magazine, an article on the passing of Jeff Cooper by Mas Ayoob specifically addresses this issue of eponomymous credit, with regards to Cooper.

"It was Cooper who defined and promulgated the Weaver stance, but he named it after Jack Weaver, whose use of the two-handed hold inspired him. He popularized the handy CW sling, but named it after Carlos Widmann of Guatemala, who shoed it to him. Jeff named the things he advocated after those who made him aware of them. That's the opposite of arrogance."

I would call it "showing class."

Posted by: Mikee at May 23, 2008
Post a comment










Remember personal info?







Terms of Use