Artboard article
- PAULGRAHAM (2019)

November 2019

If you discover something new, there's a significant chance you'll be accused of some form of heresy.

To discover new things, you have to work on ideas that are good but non-obvious; if an idea is obviously good, other people are probably already working on it. One common way for a good idea to be non-obvious is for it to be hidden in the shadow of some mistaken assumption that people are very attached to. But anything you discover from working on such an idea will tend to contradict the mistaken assumption that was concealing it. And you will thus get a lot of heat from people attached to the mistaken assumption. Galileo and Darwin are famous examples of this phenomenon, but it's probably always an ingredient in the resistance to new ideas

...

Show More
saved by: FoundryBase
updated 16 days ago
Visibility: Public (all visitors)


Comments

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!

MORE RESOURCES FROM SOURCE

More in FoundryBase from   https://paulgraham.com

Related Chunks

Related chunks with this resource

This Article can be found in 2 chunks