Many a well meant thread here.Example(s)?
But that's not the idea I am addressing. Many, many times "groundbreaking" inventions are merely the result of ignorance of the problem. People believe they've found a loophole because they simply don't know enough. This is the much, much more common case than those where someone spots what experts haven't.And some of superior designs die because of big $$$'s thrown at the inferior competition.
BetaMax.
Windows Operating system.
For a couple, many more out there.
Max.
Stage two of the 'arrogance of innocence' : Conspiracy theories of why the experts say it can't work. It's never their own fault, is it? Has to be some big conspiracy to keep their obvious genius from the world.But that's not the idea I am addressing. Many, many times "groundbreaking" inventions are merely the result of ignorance of the problem. People believe they've found a loophole because they simply don't know enough. This is the much, much more common case than those where someone spots what experts haven't.
If something is startlingly simple, yet isn't being done, it probably won't work.
The STEORN fiasco.Example(s)?
Yaakov I agree! I also say it's interesting how that same principal applies to careers of businesses, politicians and even just entertainers! They start out with novel idea which is very well received until success (which I say is fair parallel to sophistication in narrow sense of what I'm saying here) makes them swell headed, complacent, paradoxically self-conscious and I say worst of all totally deaf to their constituencyMost great inventions born of naïveté die when exposed to sophistication.
Yaakov NOW I get what you're talking aboutBut that's not the idea I am addressing. Many, many times "groundbreaking" inventions are merely the result of ignorance of the problem. People believe they've found a loophole because they simply don't know enough. This is the much, much more common case than those where someone spots what experts haven't.
If something is startlingly simple, yet isn't being done, it probably won't work.
Your title should be, "The Arrogance of Ignorance".Most great inventions born of naïveté die when exposed to sophistication.
Ignorance doesn't cover the trusting (a belief in the good intentions of others) aspect normally seen.Your title should be, "The Arrogance of Ignorance".
kvA pariah field, cast out by the scientific establishment. Between cold fusion and respectable science there is virtually no communication at all. Cold fusion papers are almost never published in refereed scientific journals, with the result that those works don't receive the normal critical scrutiny that science requires. On the other hand, because the Cold-Fusioners see themselves as a community under siege, there is little internal criticism. Experiments and theories tend to be accepted at face value, for fear of providing even more fuel for external critics, if anyone outside the group was bothering to listen. In these circumstances, crackpots flourish, making matters worse for those who believe that there is serious science going on here
I must admit that - due to linguistic deficiencies - I am not able to follow the discussion in detail.But that's not the idea I am addressing. Many, many times "groundbreaking" inventions are merely the result of ignorance of the problem. People believe they've found a loophole because they simply don't know enough. This is the much, much more common case than those where someone spots what experts haven't.
If something is startlingly simple, yet isn't being done, it probably won't work.
Because it's a great example of the intersection of Innocence, Ignorance and Arrogance promoting the dubious. A close second would be the Energy Catalyzer (E-Cat) but that's more of a pure fraud.you had to bring that up ...
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I agree... and some hoaxes have real serious consequences:Because it's a great example of the intersection of Innocence, Ignorance and Arrogance promoting the dubious. A close second would be the Energy Catalyzer (E-Cat) but that's more of a pure fraud.
https://skepticalinquirer.org/2019/01/why_e-cat_is_a_hoax/?/si/show/why_e-cat_is_a_hoax
More than 300 students, faculty and staff at UCLA and Cal State University, Los Angeles were under quarantine while health officials work to determine if they'd been vaccinated, the universities said.
+1I agree... and some hoaxes have real serious consequences:
But Deer’s investigation – nominated in February 2011 for two British Press Awards – discovered that, while Wakefield held himself out to be a dispassionate scientist, two years before the Lancet paper was published – and before any of the 12 children were even referred to the hospital – he had been hired to attack MMR by a lawyer, Richard Barr: a jobbing solicitor in the small eastern English town of King’s Lynn, who hoped to raise a speculative class action lawsuit against drug companies which manufactured the triple shot.
Unlike expert witnesses, who give professional advice and opinions, Wakefield had negotiated an unprecedented contract with Barr, then aged 48, to conduct clinical and scientific research. The goal was to find evidence of what the two men claimed to be a “new syndrome”, intended to be the centrepiece of (later failed) litigation on behalf of an eventual 1,600 British families, recruited through media stories. This publicly undisclosed role for Wakefield created the grossest conflict of interest, and the exposure of it by Deer, in February 2004, led to public uproar in Britain, the retraction of the Lancet report’s conclusions section, and, from July 2007 to May 2010, the longest-ever professional misconduct hearing by the UK’s General Medical Council (GMC).