Even professors, who do excellent research otherwise, often suddenly stop thinking analytically as soon as they step outside their domain of expertise. And some professors never learn the proper method.
As as as I know there no evidence for the thesis that thinking analytically always provides an improvement. A lot of expert thinking isn't analytic.
I've been often wondering why scientific thinking seems to be so rare. What I mean by this is dividing problems into theory and empiricism, specifying your theory exactly then looking for evidence to either confirm or deny the theory, or finding evidence to later form an exact theory.
Do you think you engaged into that type of thinking while writing this post?
As as as I know there no evidence for the thesis that thinking analytically always provides an improvement.
Not only did I not claim thinking analytically in the manner I'm describing always provides an improvement, I noted multiple exceptions when it doesn't improve it.
A lot of expert thinking isn't analytic.
If you want specific examples of what I'm referring to in regards to scientists screwing up, read Andrew Gelman's or James Coyne's blogs.
Do you think you engaged into that type of thinking while writing this post?
This is just vague.