It is also a useful heuristic, if you are trying to understand how someone else answered a question, that you shouldn't reason "But that isn't a useful way to answer the question!" and then become confused rather than annoyed. As I said, I would readily agree to the statement, but disagreement seems defensible if only vacuously and it seems wrong to interpret it as "stupidity" (though it would certainly reveal that someone is looking for reasons they are allowed to disagree).
A article in the Atlantic, linked to by someone on the unofficial LW IRC channel caught my eye. Nothing all that new for LessWrong readers, but still it is good to see any mention of such biases in mainstream media.
I break here to comment that I don't see why we would expect this to be so given the reality of academia.