BurntSynapse (and Buck Field, his alter ego) are trying to apply accepted principles of project management outside their accepted domain of applicability.
This would seem valid if we believe:
- that science research is not an information system,
- or that management sciences regarding information systems is illegitimate,
- other?
Those principles were developed within the context of engineering projects.
In engineering projects, the goals and objectives are usually known to lie within the realm of the possible, or at worst can be accomplished by making only incremental improvements to what has been been accomplished in past projects.
This seems to support a criticism that project management is inapplicable because of its origin - which is the genetic fallacy. The classic example in philosophy of science is chemistry, which developed out of alchemy.
Accepted principles of risk management would rule out any project whose goals and objectives cannot be accomplished without overthrowing basic principles of one of the most thoroughly tested scientific theories ever devised.
Agreed. I do not advocate "overthrowing" anything in terms of stating "principle of X is wrong" any more than I would say "the sun coming up is wrong". I think future theory will hold "our perception of space-time (or other fundamental here) is an observational consequence of factors X, Y, and Z."
On the other hand, BurntSynapse's notions of warp drives and hyperspace do seem to be incompatible with our current knowledge of the universe.
My notion is that warp drives and wormholes are potential sources of inspiration for work that can accomplish generally accepted goals in physics: discovery of more fundamental principles.
This appears to me (at the moment) consistent with long established history and philosophy of scientific revolutions, the Nersessian Model, and the goal of discovering deeper theory seems to be an overwhelming consensus in the physics community, I mostly rely on frequent Aspen visitor and decent skier Lisa Randall for this.
There are always some personal evaluations, but I'd like to think that with better evidence for a more promising approach, I'd happily endorse that in a heartbeat. In the meantime, I do think science fiction visions offer strategic organizational advantages to research communities.