The Science of Writing – the classic Scientifc American article on how to write well

The Science of Writing by George Gopen and Judith Swan

This article was published in the Nov-Dec 1990 issue of Scientific American.

From the introduction:

Science is often hard to read. Most people assume that its difficulties are born out of necessity, out of extreme complexity of scientific concepts, data and analysis. We argue here that complexity of thought need not lead to impenetrability of expression; we demonstrate a number of rhetorical principles that can produce clarity in communication without oversimplifying scientific issues. The results are substantive, not merely cosmetic: Improving the quality of writing actually improves the quality of thought.

Gopen and Swan propose offer these 7 writing-style rules:

  1. Follow a grammatical subject as soon as possible with its verb.
  2. Place in the stress position (i.e. the end of the sentence) the “new information” you want the reader to emphasize.
  3. Place the person or thing whose “story” a sentence is telling at the beginning of the sentence, in the topic position.
  4. Place appropriate “old information” (material  already stated in the discourse) in the topic position for linkage backward and contextualization forward.
  5. Articulate the action of every clause or sentence in its verb.
  6. In general, provide context for your reader before asking that reader to consider anything new.
  7. In general, try to ensure that the relative emphases of the substance coincide with the relative expectations for emphasis raised by the structure.

OK – – the authors weren’t the clearest of writers. The rules are sound, but writers will need to do practice exercises to master them. So has someone produced any useful practice exercises?

Daryl Bem’s advice on writing journal papers

Writing the Empirical Journal Article by Daryl Bem

Stephen Pinker’s 2012 lecture on 21st century scientific writing style


Click on the link below to watch Stephen Pinker, one of social science’s greats, give a one-hour talk on how to write good scientific papers:

Communicating Science and Technology in the 21st Century: Steven Pinker

Steven Pinker: “The Sense of Style: Scientific Communication for the 21st Century”
Harvard College Professor, and Johnstone Family Professor, Department of Psychology, Harvard University

Let’s face it: most scientists are terrible communicators. Why do the world’s most cerebral people find it so hard to convey their ideas? And how can we learn to do better? I suggest that answers can be found in a number of ideas from the modern sciences of mind and language. Among them are: The Tree and the Chain (how multidimensional ideas are mapped onto one-dimensional strings); The Curse of Knowledge (why it’s so hard to imagine what it’s like not to know something you do know); and Long Shadow of Mrs. Grundy (how to distinguish rules of proper usage that are worth keeping from those that are bogus)

The first annual Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering lecture about communicating complex scientific and technological subjects clearly and engagingly in the series: “Communicating Science and Technology in the 21st Century.”

Recorded on 9/12/12

How can I write well?

Answer: Write like Elliot Aronson, eminent social psychologist and author of the best seller The Social Animal.

Elliot Aronson is the only person in the 120-year history of the American Psychological Association to win all three of its major awards for distinguished research, distinguished teaching, and distinguished writing.

In the last 10 minutes of the 30-minute video below, Elliot Aronson talks about how he wrote his journal articles and books on social psychology. Move the time cursor to 19′ 30″: