Mitchell_Porter comments on Seeking examples of people smarter than me who got hung up - Less Wrong

10 Post author: MichaelBishop 13 January 2013 04:40PM

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Comment author: enfascination 14 January 2013 12:30:53AM *  5 points [-]

Hi, I wrote the post. I want to be good at being wrong, I want to be excellent at it. I aspire to develop habits of thought that will protect me and my peers from nursing too gently the need to be right. I thought I might learn something from the ugliest cases.

What happens to even the greatest minds that causes them to get attached to their theories? I don't know, but your examples will help me find out. A history of baggage? A reputation to protect? Mere age? Pure guts? I agree with pragmatist that Einstein's concerns about QM aren't a great example of the prompt. Hoyle, on the other hand, is a great example --- he resisted the Big Bang to his death --- for decades after it had become the most plausible model.

Each of the bulleted examples up top was a great mind with too much emotional baggage to keep from being left behind by science. I don't want it to happen to me, and generally I want to cultivate in scientific discourse a tone that makes it safe for even the most agitated reasoner to bow out with grace. Thanks for your input and for your leads.

Comment author: Mitchell_Porter 14 January 2013 01:08:15AM -2 points [-]

Why do you care which scientific theories are right?

Comment author: enfascination 14 January 2013 01:42:26PM 1 point [-]

This post is less about The Truth that and more about science as a personal endeavor, as something you do on yourself to be a better thinker, or not.

Comment author: Mitchell_Porter 14 January 2013 02:57:08PM 0 points [-]

But what is it that you want to be better at thinking about?