12 JUN 2012 by ideonexus

 Changing Your Mind is a Virtue

All interpretations made by a scientist are hypotheses, and all hypotheses are tentative. They must forever be tested and they must be revised if found to be unsatisfactory. Hence, a change of mind in a scientist, and particularly in a great scientist, is not only not a sign of weakness but rather evidence for continuing attention to the respective problem and an ability to test the hypothesis again and again.
Folksonomies: virtue hypotheses
Folksonomies: virtue hypotheses
  1  notes

It shows you're paying attentions and are flexible to new evidence.

25 APR 2012 by ideonexus

 Science is More Than Lone Geniuses

The progress of science depends less than is usually believed on the efforts and performance of the individual genius ... many important discoveries have been made by men of ordinary talents, simply because chance had made them, at the proper time and in the proper place and circumstances, recipients of a body of doctrines, facts and techniques that rendered almost inevitable the recognition of an important phenomenon. It is surprising that some historian has not taken malicious pleasure in w...
Folksonomies: history science
Folksonomies: history science
  1  notes

It is mostly individuals in the right place at the right time and happy accidents.

01 JAN 2012 by ideonexus

 A Clock Stopped at the Moment Feynman's Wife Died

Sometimes we can actually pin down the explanation of a weird coincidence. A great American scientist called Richard Feynman tragically lost his wife to cancer, and the clock in her room stopped at precisely the moment she died. Goose-pimples! But Dr Feynman was not a great scientist for nothing. He worked out the true explanation. The clock was faulty. If you picked it up and tilted it, it tended to stop. When Mrs Feynman died, the nurse needed to record tl the time for the official death ce...
  1  notes

But he traced the phenomenon to a faulty mechanism in the clock that triggered when the nurse picked it up to record the time of death.