Data Management is Based on Philosophy, Not Science by Malcolm Chisholm.
From the post:
There’s a joke running around on Twitter that the definition of a data scientist is “a data analyst who lives in California.” I’m sure the good natured folks of the Golden State will not object to me bringing this up to make a point. The point is: Thinking purely in terms of marketing, which is a better title — data scientist or data philosopher?
My instincts tell me there is no contest. The term data scientist conjures up an image of a tense, driven individual, surrounded by complex technology in a laboratory somewhere, wrestling valuable secrets out of the strange substance called data. By contrast, the term data philosopher brings to mind a pipe-smoking elderly gentleman sitting in a winged chair in some dusty recess of academia where he occasionally engages in meaningless word games with like-minded individuals.
These stereotypes are obviously crude, but they are probably what would come into the minds of most executive managers. Yet how true are they? I submit that there is a strong case that data management is much more like applied philosophy than it is like applied science.
Applied philosophy. I like that!
You know where I am going to come out on this issue so I won’t belabor it.
Enjoy reading Malcolm’s post!