Honestly that sounds a bit like a good thing to me?
I’ve spent a lot of time looking into the Epicureans being right about so much thousands of years before those ideas resurfaced again despite not having the scientific method, and their success really boiled down to the analytical approach of being very conservative in dismissing false negatives or embracing false positives—a technique that I think is very relevant to any topics where experimental certainty is evasive.
If there is a compelling case for dragons, maybe we should also be applying it to gnomes and unicorns and everything else we can to see where it might actually end up sticking.
The belief that we already have the answers is one of the most damaging to actually uncovering them when we in fact do not.
Honestly that sounds a bit like a good thing to me?
I’ve spent a lot of time looking into the Epicureans being right about so much thousands of years before those ideas resurfaced again despite not having the scientific method, and their success really boiled down to the analytical approach of being very conservative in dismissing false negatives or embracing false positives—a technique that I think is very relevant to any topics where experimental certainty is evasive.
If there is a compelling case for dragons, maybe we should also be applying it to gnomes and unicorns and everything else we can to see where it might actually end up sticking.
The belief that we already have the answers is one of the most damaging to actually uncovering them when we in fact do not.