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Principles of Scientific Communication
Science will accomplish nothing if scientists cannot communicate their research and findings. We would not have known Darwin’s name if he did not, two decades after collecting and analyzing his data, finally publish his manuscript On The Origin of Species.[1]
Why is writing important in science? It’s not enough to simply have an idea, or discover something. Credit for the finding will go to the person who first published the work. This is what motivated Darwin; more than 20 years after his data collection voyage he received a letter from another naturalist, Alfred Wallace, who had made similar discoveries and was developing a theory of natural selection. Darwin went into a writing frenzy and finished a quarter of a million words within one year.
Scientific writing is different than creative writing, although both can be improved by storytelling. Writing for science requires clarity since the goal is to explain new discoveries or concepts.
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