tea.mathoverflow.net - Discussion Feed (Questions for importance of concepts) 2018-11-04T23:14:45-08:00 http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/ Lussumo Vanilla & Feed Publisher Alex Bartel comments on "Questions for importance of concepts" (12591) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/894/questions-for-importance-of-concepts/?Focus=12591#Comment_12591 2011-01-12T18:17:34-08:00 2018-11-04T23:14:45-08:00 Alex Bartel http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/393/ Dear Hans, I left fairly detailed feedback on that question of yours and personally, I am still not sure whether you actually know exactly what kind of answer you were hoping for when asking the ... Dear Hans, I left fairly detailed feedback on that question of yours and personally, I am still not sure whether you actually know exactly what kind of answer you were hoping for when asking the question. I think that the asker not knowing exactly what he is looking for is not a good omen for the question.

I would recommend you to be less worried about asking questions that are well received, but simply ask questions that you really want to know the answer to. That includes knowing precisely what it is that you actually want to know and knowing what kind of answer you are looking for. By the way, I think that meta.MO is a perfectly good place to address the latter question.

]]>
Hans Stricker comments on "Questions for importance of concepts" (12565) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/894/questions-for-importance-of-concepts/?Focus=12565#Comment_12565 2011-01-12T14:35:14-08:00 2018-11-04T23:14:45-08:00 Hans Stricker http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/85/ @Qiaochu: I would have liked to enter into a discussion on your comment (I intended the two questions - in the subject and the body of my post - NOT to be quite different), but I am afraid that not ... (Forums are great, but only up to the point, when a personal conversation would save lots of time and misunderstanding. I am afraid that I cannot clear up such meticulous misunderstandings by forum posts.)]]> Hans Stricker comments on "Questions for importance of concepts" (12559) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/894/questions-for-importance-of-concepts/?Focus=12559#Comment_12559 2011-01-12T13:47:49-08:00 2018-11-04T23:14:45-08:00 Hans Stricker http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/85/ I fixed it. Ryan Budney comments on "Questions for importance of concepts" (12551) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/894/questions-for-importance-of-concepts/?Focus=12551#Comment_12551 2011-01-12T11:01:58-08:00 2018-11-04T23:14:45-08:00 Ryan Budney http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/107/ Hans, FYI your 2nd link is broken. I think this works: http://mathoverflow.net/questions/51682/reasons-for-the-importance-of-planarity-and-colorability Qiaochu Yuan comments on "Questions for importance of concepts" (12548) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/894/questions-for-importance-of-concepts/?Focus=12548#Comment_12548 2011-01-12T09:58:57-08:00 2018-11-04T23:14:45-08:00 Qiaochu Yuan http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/13/ Your question is not of the form "why is X important?" It is of the form "could we have predicted that X is important for objective reasons internal to mathematics?" which is ... Your question is not of the form "why is X important?" It is of the form "could we have predicted that X is important for objective reasons internal to mathematics?" which is quite different and I still don't really understand what it means. If you had asked "why is planarity important?" then your question would have just been closed as a duplicate and there would have been no argument in the comments.

]]>
Ryan Budney comments on "Questions for importance of concepts" (12547) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/894/questions-for-importance-of-concepts/?Focus=12547#Comment_12547 2011-01-12T08:24:44-08:00 2018-11-04T23:14:45-08:00 Ryan Budney http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/107/ By and large I interpret "why is X important" style questions as being lazy. "Important for what?" is the natural retort. "What do you value?" ...
I think traditional ways in which these posts are redeemed include: Perhaps the OP knows the idea is considered important by someone else, but doesn't know why. Perhaps the OP has a sense the idea is useful, but hasn't found a concrete formulation of why. Or perhaps enough of the people reading the post know what the OP values, so they can fill in the blanks regarding "Important for what?".

I think if enough of the above fail, then people start asking for more details from the OP.

I think questions of the form "what is the right definition/way to think of..." have similar issues.]]>
Hans Stricker comments on "Questions for importance of concepts" (12546) http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/discussion/894/questions-for-importance-of-concepts/?Focus=12546#Comment_12546 2011-01-12T08:05:33-08:00 2018-11-04T23:14:45-08:00 Hans Stricker http://mathoverflow.tqft.net/account/85/ Some questions for the importance of concepts seem to be well accepted, e.g. Mike Shulman's question http://mathoverflow.net/questions/49483/why-are-profinite-topologies-important, also search for ...
What makes a question for importance acceptable and well received?]]>