It’s the other way about—I can’t think of an example where someone who didn’t know the language of any field of learning has successfully convinced that field of anything (other than that they are a fool).
I’m not saying that person is particularly ignorant—they may be quite smart in some ways—but they’re not doing what’s necessary to convince. My optimisation is to ignore them until they put in the effort—it’s much easier for them to learn the language than to do the novel thinking, after all. If that makes them frustrated, so be it.
Quite the reverse—it guides me to pay attention to those people who do take the trouble. It’s not as if I’m in any danger of running out of information these days.
It’s the other way about—I can’t think of an example where someone who didn’t know the language of any field of learning has successfully convinced that field of anything (other than that they are a fool).
I’m not saying that person is particularly ignorant—they may be quite smart in some ways—but they’re not doing what’s necessary to convince. My optimisation is to ignore them until they put in the effort—it’s much easier for them to learn the language than to do the novel thinking, after all. If that makes them frustrated, so be it.
The point is not that it keeps them frustrated, the point is that it keeps you ignorant.
Quite the reverse—it guides me to pay attention to those people who do take the trouble. It’s not as if I’m in any danger of running out of information these days.
The question still remains why you think your heuristic is particularly good.