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Subject:Re: TECHNICAL, ACADEMIC: use or not use `we' From:Joe Fockler <jfockler -at- IPHASE -dot- COM> Date:Tue, 1 Feb 1994 09:42:52 -0600
According to Ad absurdum per aspera :
+ chen1 -at- csc -dot- liv -dot- ac -dot- uk (Mr. C. Chen) wrote:
+ > I have been told, many times, that good academic papers and
+ > technical reports should be in the third person... and the
+ > passive voice...
+ Many authorities [this implies that many other "authorities" do not
consider] consider this to be obsolete
thinking. + The third-person-passive style is rooted in the slow and
+ painful evolution of what we think of today as rationalism
+ and normal scientific thought. It has served us well in
+ that capacity, but does not seem necessary today. Some
+ journals, and some scientists, still insist on it, though.
+ Note that it is possible to write clearly and engagingly in
+ that style, just as it is possible to write murkily and off-
+ puttingly in the first person and active voice. Not every-
+ thing you are told by the grammar-checking module in a word
+ processor is to be taken as gospel, either. :)
+ My advice: *think* like a scientist and *write*, carefully,
+ in whatever style comes naturally to you. [This is great advice]
+ Crossposted to bit.listserv.techwr-l, a newsgroup and mailing
+ list devoted to technical-writing issues, with followups
+ back here to misc.writing.
+ Cheers,
+ Joe
+ "Just another personal opinion from the People's Republic of Berkeley"