Not specifically in pure maths, but agree I also found that a math PhD is good to have for jobs in AI, finance etc. But an equivalent industry experience might be worth the same at least.
There is Artin's approach, and then there is a more abstract approach by Grothendieck relating to the fundamental group of algebraic topology.
In the movie Beautiful mind there is a scene, where a student tells John Nash that he can proof that 'Galois extensions are the same as covering spaces'. This follows from the Grothendieck's approach. However the analogy between Galois extessions and the fundamental group was known even before Grothendieck.
Then there are even more general approaches in the category theory setting.
Today these generalisations are taught indeed without much regard to the computational spirit of 19th century mathematics. They have their merit as you say, but I agree understanding the computational aspects are instructive in fully appreciating the generalisations and analogies.
Very true. When I was doing PhD in pure maths I had random people explain to me that a PhD would not necessarily give me an advantage in the job market. Like I would come to do a PhD without figuring that out.
Samuel Eilenberg, one of the founders of category theory, used to tell to his students "You should have you own category". Meaning, that when you work on category theory you should have in mind applications to something. One of his students used to say "my category is Cat". Cat means the category of categories.
It is not true that traits that are not advantageous are unlikely to be maintained over many generations. For example, many genetic diseases have survived for many generations. This may happen because, for example, they correlate with some other more positive traits. Or, because of other indirect, external factors.
Incidentally we still have "Silk Road" today. In its modern usage it refers particularly to some oil and gas pipelines running from the east to the west.
In the latest news on the Silk Road, Azerbaijan, after its victorious war over Armenia, secured a direct land transport corridor through Armenian territory to its enclave of Nakhchivan and further to Turkey. https://menafn.com/1101103191/Another-important-issue-is-tha...
Did some googling, and came across this article about this Basque Pidgin https://core.ac.uk/reader/230764570. It contains many interesting facts. Including the passage:
"Certain surprising similarities among pidgins and creoles spoken in places distant from each other and with different linguistic components in their formation have led some linguistic to formulate a monogenetic theory that would trace many pidgins and creoles to a common ancestor: A Portuguese based pidgin or even to the Lingua Franca or Sabir spoken in the Mediterranean Basin from the Middle Ages (Whinnom, 1977)."
Even after the middle ages Portuguese seems to be an especially common source of pidgins, found in South east Asia, Africa and the Caribbean (curiously, in now Dutch territories) among other places.
Some time ago I needed ball video tracking for a demo at work. I failed to find any out of the box solution which worked satisfactorily. It was way easier to find solutions for seemingly more complex tasks of people tracking or human pose estimation, for which you have numerous publically available algorithms/models.
I saw a couple of comments complaining about making people into data points, and that this is dehumanising. But I do not see this.
Growth of data based technologies and information surely create risks to privacy, which is another story. However, treating people data as just data is neither new nor dehumanising. Science does that with everything and that is called abstraction. Just make sure that personal data protection measures are there.
This is perhaps more about economic competition than data safety. China has been doing this for a long time. USA is also taking the same approach recently.
This article reminded me of when I was in academia some people used to take notes of talks with Latex, including typesetting diagrams. It was quite impressive. I tried it myself I think, but I can't remember to what results.