Theory/theology prevailing over experiment/reality is pre-enlightenment and
it is highly irrational.

On Sat, Dec 29, 2012 at 6:24 AM, Alain Sepeda <[email protected]>wrote:

> One thing to take into account is the "rationality" of the system...
> if too rational no eccentric ideas is tolerated.
>
> if a system is too strict about what is tolerated it will block innovation.
>
> it is where Tenure system can help, or the  fellowship that you find in
> some big corps...
>
> it is probably what is allowing ST microelectronics, Technova, MHI, to go
> on in LENR...
> it is what was finally too weak at SPAWAR...
>
>
> allowing a minority of irrationality, of lack of responsability, lack of
> watching, lack of need to prove is a way to allow creativity to survive...
>
> I agree also that english language, anglosaxon liberalist (european
> meaning, opposed to mediaval) way of mind have make the occident science as
> a monolith of groupthink... mostly rational but sometime locked...
>
> island of insulated culture are needed. it allow speciation, like darwin
> found...
>
>
> 2012/12/29 Harry Veeder <[email protected]>
>
>> Another factor to consider is the influence of the english language
>> publications
>> Nature and Scientific American. They have less infleunce non-english
>> speaking communities
>> so their dim views on LENR carry less weight in non-english speaking
>> nations like Italy.
>>
>>
>> Harry
>>
>>
>> On Fri, Dec 28, 2012 at 7:46 PM, James Bowery <[email protected]> wrote:
>> > That's one way to view it.  An alternative that isn't necessarily
>> exclusive:
>> >
>> > I recall holding a public debate at the Ruben H. Fleet Science Center
>> in San
>> > Diego during the 1980s -- before the collapse of the Soviet Union --
>> > regarding NASA's role in launch services vs the fledgling private launch
>> > services.  During the debate an engineer from General Dynamics who had
>> > worked on the Atlas got up and declared that the reason the US
>> government
>> > couldn't get its launch services running as well as the communists was
>> that
>> > the communists executed corrupt bureaucrats, and that was what was
>> needed if
>> > the public sector was going to be in charge of launch services.
>> >
>> > In short:  The commies were good at communism because they had no
>> private
>> > sector to tax, so they had to make communism work.  The us public
>> sector is
>> > the worst of both worlds because it has a private sector to tax and so
>> > doesn't have to execute it corrupt bureaucrats to stay alive.
>> >
>> >
>> > On Fri, Dec 28, 2012 at 5:23 PM, Jed Rothwell <[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>> >>
>> >> James Bowery <[email protected]> wrote:
>> >>
>> >>> To what do you attribute Italy's relatively-functional immune system?
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> A laid-back attitude. I mean it. They don't take themselves as
>> seriously
>> >> as we do. They know their institutions are far from perfect.
>> >>
>> >> The U.S. is burdened by too much self-respect. We take ourselves too
>> >> seriously. We have too much high regard for out place in the world and
>> our
>> >> institutions. (Other than the Congress.) All this blather about being
>> the
>> >> best place on earth leads us to act like the world's policeman, and to
>> >> imagine that our universities and scientists are the best of the best.
>> When
>> >> experts at the DoE or the major journals say that cold fusion does not
>> >> exist, ordinary people give their opinions far too much credibility.
>> Too
>> >> much respect.
>> >>
>> >> Japanese people tend to be even worse in that regard. They have
>> waa-a-a-y
>> >> too much respect for experts.
>> >>
>> >> The fact is, many scientists are incompetent screw-ups. It is the human
>> >> condition. Farmers, programmers, stock brokers, bank presidents, army
>> >> generals . . . people everywhere make mistakes. Half the population is
>> below
>> >> average, as an army general was once horrified to discover. I think the
>> >> Italians are more aware of that. It helps that they lost several wars
>> in a
>> >> row. It helps to be a smaller country, less full of yourself. See the
>> novel
>> >> "Catch 22" for details.
>> >>
>> >> - Jed
>> >>
>> >
>>
>>
>

Reply via email to