In our newest "how can we help you?" thread, a reader writes:
I'm 5 years post-PhD and have been publishing at a modest rate since then (about 1 article per year), and I'm starting to find it a bit onerous to keep track of my own research program. Now when I'm editing new drafts I find myself always uncovering thorny issues with subtle details of how the new paper fits in with my previous ones. I would love to hear if others have found effective ways to manage and streamline this part of the late-early-career writing process. I feel like I'm always having "Oh shit, I can't say that because…" moments fairly late in the game and then scrambling for a solution. I work in a so-called "core" analytic subfield, in case that's relevant.
Interesting query. I'm nearly 13 years (!) post-PhD now and have published quite a bit, and I haven't really encountered this difficulty. I guess I'm a bit puzzled by the OP's thought that they can't say something in a new paper because of something they have written before. Is their thought that everything they say across different papers must be entirely consistent? If so, I'm not sure that I think one needs to do that! Why not follow the arguments where they lead, publish things that are in tension with each other if that's where the arguments lead, and then perhaps explore and try to resolve those tensions in future work?
This has been my own strategy in a few research programs, and by my lights there are a few nice things about it. First, you don't encounter the OP's problem so much (the problem of trying to shoehorn all of your arguments into unnatural alignment). Second, it gives your readers (and you!) more to grapple with moving forward! Third, I think you actually see plenty of this in philosophical history. Kant's approach to justifying the categorical imperative, for example, is quite different in the Groundwork and Critique of Practical Reason–presumably because (or so some have argued) because Kant realized that his argument in Part III of the Groundwork didn't quite work. Philosophy isn't always neat and tidy, it seems to me, and one shouldn't feel obliged to make it so. Just focus on one argument at a time, note tensions that occur to you, and then move on–perhaps dealing with them later!
Or so I'm inclined to think. But these are just my thoughts. What are yours?
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