This debate/discussion occurred on 09 Jan 2023 at 16:06:42...
Nikola Tesla said "The day Science begins to study non physical phenomena it will make
more progress in one decade than in all the previous the centuries of its existence.
Me I'm reading a biography of Tesla right now. He was brilliant in many ways,
and weird (and totally wrong) in others.
Opponent Your interpretation skills are needful of a critical review
Me There have been things he obviously got wrong, and later in
life he was somewhat irrational. You disagree?
Supporter YES. Similarly Isaac Newton.
Me Yes, he spent more time on Biblical analysis and alchemy than
physics and math. Imagine what he might have discovered is he hadn't wasted that time.
Opponent That probably counts for most wellknown scientists. People
like to pretend, that they were always right, whatever they said, but that is very
much untrue. They might have been right in some particular field of expertise and then
had a go at another adjacent field and turned out to be completely off.
Opponent You could be rite !!
Me Totally agree. There are so many cases where experts in one
field made complete idiots of themselves when they got involved in another.
Supporter You mean "you couldn't be more right" ... ? Spelling
correctly does not seem to be a problem to you, compared to other comments, so why
do it here?
Supporter The problem arises, when people try to let that count, as
if they were always wrong or always right. a carpenter can make great furniture and
possibly can repair his own car, should he have learned about it in the past, but
a carpenter can never replace a car mechanic.
Me Sure, you need to look at the evidence someone presents rather than
worrying only about the person's reputation. I mean, expertise does count, but
it's not everything.
I usually write a blog post about once a week. The latest post can be viewed here: Avoid Microsoft: If you don't really like computers much you could make things a bit better for yourself. (posted 2024-12-04 at 12:05:50). I do podcasts too!. You can listen to my latest podcast, here: OJB's Podcast 2024-11-18 Unity Through Division: Sometimes hard decisions need to be made to make genuine progress..