A few days ago, a Nautilus article about why researchers produce less disruptive work as they age was trending here on HN.
I was already writing about a related idea, so I figured I’d share it. The short version is that learning makes us better, but it also makes some ideas harder to reach. That’s why I try to write down my naive thoughts before I learn enough to stop having them.
I think you miss the point. How would you feel if you had a Ferrari with a noticeable scratch? Yes, it is great to have such a nice car, but it'd be a pity. So much much effort was put into the whole thing and this little detail is what lingers on your mind.
That would be good. I only said that his "lawmakers who later ascend to leadership positions perform similarly to matched peers beforehand but outperform them by 47 percentage points annually after ascension." is way too long. I guess other people disagreed because I got some downvotes.
I thought that according law they are distributors, not publishers. That’s how they avoid liability for all the damage they do. They really try to have it both ways
I was already writing about a related idea, so I figured I’d share it. The short version is that learning makes us better, but it also makes some ideas harder to reach. That’s why I try to write down my naive thoughts before I learn enough to stop having them.
This is my first blog post. Hope you enjoy it.
Related HN discussion: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48111243