I suspect most people don’t have the self-discipline for it; being “forced” to do something almost every day is a good way for most people to ensure they work on something that has high barriers to productivity (most difficult pursuits), even if they really enjoy it.
Possibly even more importantly, individuals almost never have access to the infrastructure and support systems they need to do really interesting things[1]. How should one go about advancing genetics without a lab? Even a small university didn’t really have the resources I felt I needed to do some of my research, but at my lab they’re not even costly (to me or the lab) to procure. Access to petabyte data sets? Petaflop computers? The marginal cost of granting an additional person access is minimal, but I don’t know of any institutions that grant such access to local bartenders.
[1] Art can mostly be excluded, but not entirely, since some great art is still really expensive to produce.
I suspect most people don’t have the self-discipline for it; being “forced” to do something almost every day is a good way for most people to ensure they work on something that has high barriers to productivity (most difficult pursuits), even if they really enjoy it.
Possibly even more importantly, individuals almost never have access to the infrastructure and support systems they need to do really interesting things[1]. How should one go about advancing genetics without a lab? Even a small university didn’t really have the resources I felt I needed to do some of my research, but at my lab they’re not even costly (to me or the lab) to procure. Access to petabyte data sets? Petaflop computers? The marginal cost of granting an additional person access is minimal, but I don’t know of any institutions that grant such access to local bartenders.
[1] Art can mostly be excluded, but not entirely, since some great art is still really expensive to produce.