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Less work, says the title text.  But - less work for WHO?  See, actually correcting a widely accepted theory (or replacing it) takes a *lot* of work.  Lots of textbooks to be rewritten.  Lots of courses to be updated.  Errata on material too valuable to discard completely.  Lots of people to be informed - this is after the conferences and papers that establish the overturning of the existing widely accepted theory.  Which in themselves are usually going to take a few years.  It's just that there is a chance that the person uncovering the problem may be able to escape all that work ... although this is only going to happen for someone outside the field; for someone inside, they'll be writing papers and textbooks and doing the work, and they may expect to build considerable prestige as a result.  Rachel {{unsigned ip|108.162.222.38}}
 
Less work, says the title text.  But - less work for WHO?  See, actually correcting a widely accepted theory (or replacing it) takes a *lot* of work.  Lots of textbooks to be rewritten.  Lots of courses to be updated.  Errata on material too valuable to discard completely.  Lots of people to be informed - this is after the conferences and papers that establish the overturning of the existing widely accepted theory.  Which in themselves are usually going to take a few years.  It's just that there is a chance that the person uncovering the problem may be able to escape all that work ... although this is only going to happen for someone outside the field; for someone inside, they'll be writing papers and textbooks and doing the work, and they may expect to build considerable prestige as a result.  Rachel {{unsigned ip|108.162.222.38}}
 
:You know, I had always read the title text as if overturning a rigorously supported and integral theory was more work but then I realized it's from a layman's perspective. [[User:Lackadaisical|Lackadaisical]] ([[User talk:Lackadaisical|talk]]) 12:58, 27 July 2016 (UTC)
 
:You know, I had always read the title text as if overturning a rigorously supported and integral theory was more work but then I realized it's from a layman's perspective. [[User:Lackadaisical|Lackadaisical]] ([[User talk:Lackadaisical|talk]]) 12:58, 27 July 2016 (UTC)
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Nearly 14 years later, I asked "Bing Chat with GPT-4" about the "Racecar on a train" reference, and this very cartoon was the response used in explaining the The Dunning-Kruger Effect. (Unfortunately, URLs don't exist for this kind of thing. You have to re-run the inquiry. [[User:These Are Not The Comments You Are Looking For|These Are Not The Comments You Are Looking For]] ([[User talk:These Are Not The Comments You Are Looking For|talk]]) 02:45, 27 November 2023 (UTC)
 

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