“I would start doubting if I noticed numerous important mistakes in the details my side’s data and my colleagues didn’t want to talk about it” . - I couldn’t quite follow this. Could you give an example, or explain it a different way?
I think what he is saying is they’d want to hear something overwhelmingly obvious, however, the beginning of doubt starts with noticing an error in one of the details of the assumption, which most of the time are subtle.
“The important details you haven’t noticed are invisible to you, and the details you have noticed seem completely obvious and you see right through them. This all makes makes it difficult to imagine how you could be missing something important.”
“noticing an error in one of the details of the assumption”—I don’t quite get this. Like, it would be an error in the mental model, or there would be a detail / piece of data which didn’t quite fit the model or something else? I’m not arguing anything here, I just can’t quite understand what you are saying.
“I would start doubting if I noticed numerous important mistakes in the details my side’s data and my colleagues didn’t want to talk about it” . - I couldn’t quite follow this. Could you give an example, or explain it a different way?
I think what he is saying is they’d want to hear something overwhelmingly obvious, however, the beginning of doubt starts with noticing an error in one of the details of the assumption, which most of the time are subtle.
“The important details you haven’t noticed are invisible to you, and the details you have noticed seem completely obvious and you see right through them. This all makes makes it difficult to imagine how you could be missing something important.”
“noticing an error in one of the details of the assumption”—I don’t quite get this. Like, it would be an error in the mental model, or there would be a detail / piece of data which didn’t quite fit the model or something else? I’m not arguing anything here, I just can’t quite understand what you are saying.