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by UncleMeat
1261 days ago
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Sure, there is inertia. There are famous examples of people with ideas backed up by data who were treated very badly (notably - they tend to be from before the last 100 years). Academics do get things wrong, even in groups. But an outsider showing up and saying "academia is lying to you" and making a show aimed at a popular audience is... just not going to be the place where paradigm shifts come from. |
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https://www.symmetrymagazine.org/article/marchapril-2008/out...
https://www.medicaldaily.com/mad-scientist-6-scientists-who-...
https://bigthink.com/articles/a-brief-history-of-outsider-sc...
And much longer: https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/scientific-revolutions/
Nowadays there are other means of doing 'citizen science', enabled by more, cheaper, and faster mobility, similar for access to information, and new technologies like LIDAR, drones, and much more.
In turn enabling the discovery of patterns which do not fit into the common wisdom.
What is so hard about understanding that?
Edit: Also 'institutional blindness', or if that's not a thing in english, the german 'Betriebsblind(heit)', meaning to be blind to things, because too far out to be recognizable, diverging too much from the established ways of doing things, and so on...