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Jannik Reigl's avatar

This is a great read! You hint at a few options to counteract the neglect of anomalies ("better innovation policy and maybe even a more ambitious scientific culture"; "messy science") and investigate them. What do you propose specifically to do about it?

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Lotte Sarembe's avatar

Hi,

really interesting piece, thank you so much for writing this!

I was wondering (perhaps a weirdly specific question) whether you have also read The Empirical Stance by Bas van Fraassen. Van Fraassen makes an argument that a 'hidden variable', which he hypothesizes as something that exists in our lived/felt experience, is needed to change our subjective world towards receptivity to novel theories. He argues that a paradigm 'at the horizon' must be fundamentally different to the 'current' one (otherwise, how could it be a real shift?) and so they seem absurd at first ('unintelligibility of the prospective paradigm' he calls it). He argues that arguments for novel theories are likewise necessarily perceived as absurd.

I link this to how you talk about anomalies here, and that we do not grapple as much with them as you think we should. The anomalies, perhaps, are the absurd evidence for a novel paradigm, whose admittance into consideration must be preceded by a certain openness.

Considering that if that openness does not occur, a pivot towards the 'absurd' might not be made, do you think that the scientific community should foster the seeking out/evoking of certain experiences (the 'hidden variable' leading to that openness as argued by van Fraassen) and make space for an integration of emotions into our accounts of how scientific progress occurs? And (if you like exploring ideas) how would you imagine such an integration could look into the broader social system that is the scientific community?

I'm a beginner in this topic so I don't mean to come at you with a million blindspots (but I probably do), but I would like to hear your take!

Best,

Lotte

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