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I am frankly concerned by the closure of this question:

What are the olfactory chemicals in whiteboard/permanent markers and what do they bind to in the nose, lungs, and brain?What are the olfactory chemicals in whiteboard/permanent markers and what do they bind to in the nose, lungs, and brain?

and in particular by the comments on its topicality. I commented also, but I think the point merits fuller discussion here.

Essentially, it looks like the question was closed because part of it is asking about some organic solvents. This seems to me incredibly short-sighted. All of biology is intricately interwoven with chemistry, physics, mathematics. Is a question that mentions salt solutions "chemistry" or one about electrical potentials "physics"? Should it then be broken up into pieces and distributed across multiple SE sites? Who on earth could that approach possibly benefit?

The tendency to salami-slice disciplinary boundaries and jealously police them is fundamentally destructive to science and should be resisted at all costs. I genuinely fail to see how this site can hope to be of any value to anyone if it operates with that kind of attitude. Few enough people are interested in it in the first place.

Clearly, the question in question is not a great one, and there might be a different discussion to have about that. We're in beta and should certainly try to improve such questions. But it is absolutely a question about biology, relating to sensory receptors and the perception of sweetness. It very clearly isn't a question like "How does one synthesise 1,1,1-trichloroethane?" or whatever, which would be better asked of a bunch of chemists.

As the range of scientific disciplines with their own SE sites grows, this sort of issue seems likely to arise more often. So how can we avoid fragmenting to the point where we just turn away questions and are left with nothing?

I am frankly concerned by the closure of this question:

What are the olfactory chemicals in whiteboard/permanent markers and what do they bind to in the nose, lungs, and brain?

and in particular by the comments on its topicality. I commented also, but I think the point merits fuller discussion here.

Essentially, it looks like the question was closed because part of it is asking about some organic solvents. This seems to me incredibly short-sighted. All of biology is intricately interwoven with chemistry, physics, mathematics. Is a question that mentions salt solutions "chemistry" or one about electrical potentials "physics"? Should it then be broken up into pieces and distributed across multiple SE sites? Who on earth could that approach possibly benefit?

The tendency to salami-slice disciplinary boundaries and jealously police them is fundamentally destructive to science and should be resisted at all costs. I genuinely fail to see how this site can hope to be of any value to anyone if it operates with that kind of attitude. Few enough people are interested in it in the first place.

Clearly, the question in question is not a great one, and there might be a different discussion to have about that. We're in beta and should certainly try to improve such questions. But it is absolutely a question about biology, relating to sensory receptors and the perception of sweetness. It very clearly isn't a question like "How does one synthesise 1,1,1-trichloroethane?" or whatever, which would be better asked of a bunch of chemists.

As the range of scientific disciplines with their own SE sites grows, this sort of issue seems likely to arise more often. So how can we avoid fragmenting to the point where we just turn away questions and are left with nothing?

I am frankly concerned by the closure of this question:

What are the olfactory chemicals in whiteboard/permanent markers and what do they bind to in the nose, lungs, and brain?

and in particular by the comments on its topicality. I commented also, but I think the point merits fuller discussion here.

Essentially, it looks like the question was closed because part of it is asking about some organic solvents. This seems to me incredibly short-sighted. All of biology is intricately interwoven with chemistry, physics, mathematics. Is a question that mentions salt solutions "chemistry" or one about electrical potentials "physics"? Should it then be broken up into pieces and distributed across multiple SE sites? Who on earth could that approach possibly benefit?

The tendency to salami-slice disciplinary boundaries and jealously police them is fundamentally destructive to science and should be resisted at all costs. I genuinely fail to see how this site can hope to be of any value to anyone if it operates with that kind of attitude. Few enough people are interested in it in the first place.

Clearly, the question in question is not a great one, and there might be a different discussion to have about that. We're in beta and should certainly try to improve such questions. But it is absolutely a question about biology, relating to sensory receptors and the perception of sweetness. It very clearly isn't a question like "How does one synthesise 1,1,1-trichloroethane?" or whatever, which would be better asked of a bunch of chemists.

As the range of scientific disciplines with their own SE sites grows, this sort of issue seems likely to arise more often. So how can we avoid fragmenting to the point where we just turn away questions and are left with nothing?

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walkytalky
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Can we avoid counterproductive disciplinary fragmentation?

I am frankly concerned by the closure of this question:

What are the olfactory chemicals in whiteboard/permanent markers and what do they bind to in the nose, lungs, and brain?

and in particular by the comments on its topicality. I commented also, but I think the point merits fuller discussion here.

Essentially, it looks like the question was closed because part of it is asking about some organic solvents. This seems to me incredibly short-sighted. All of biology is intricately interwoven with chemistry, physics, mathematics. Is a question that mentions salt solutions "chemistry" or one about electrical potentials "physics"? Should it then be broken up into pieces and distributed across multiple SE sites? Who on earth could that approach possibly benefit?

The tendency to salami-slice disciplinary boundaries and jealously police them is fundamentally destructive to science and should be resisted at all costs. I genuinely fail to see how this site can hope to be of any value to anyone if it operates with that kind of attitude. Few enough people are interested in it in the first place.

Clearly, the question in question is not a great one, and there might be a different discussion to have about that. We're in beta and should certainly try to improve such questions. But it is absolutely a question about biology, relating to sensory receptors and the perception of sweetness. It very clearly isn't a question like "How does one synthesise 1,1,1-trichloroethane?" or whatever, which would be better asked of a bunch of chemists.

As the range of scientific disciplines with their own SE sites grows, this sort of issue seems likely to arise more often. So how can we avoid fragmenting to the point where we just turn away questions and are left with nothing?