That’s a good approach for things where there’s a ‘real answer’ out there somewhere. I think it’s often the case that there’s no good answer. There might be a group of people saying they found a solution, and since there no other solutions they think you should fully buy into theirs and accept whatever nonsensities come packaged with it (for instance, consider how you’d approach the 1+2+3+4+5..=-1/12 proof if you were doing math before calculus existed). I think it’s very important to reject seemingly good answers on their own merits even if there isn’t a better answer around. indeed, this is one of the processes that can lead to finding a better answer.
That’s a good approach for things where there’s a ‘real answer’ out there somewhere. I think it’s often the case that there’s no good answer. There might be a group of people saying they found a solution, and since there no other solutions they think you should fully buy into theirs and accept whatever nonsensities come packaged with it (for instance, consider how you’d approach the 1+2+3+4+5..=-1/12 proof if you were doing math before calculus existed). I think it’s very important to reject seemingly good answers on their own merits even if there isn’t a better answer around. indeed, this is one of the processes that can lead to finding a better answer.