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Drink deep, or taste not the Pierian spring / There shallow draughts intoxicate the brain, / And drinking largely sobers us again.”
When you first learn some formal logic and about fallacies, it’s hard to not use the shiny new hammer to go around playing ‘fallacy bingo’ (to mix metaphors): “aha! that is an
ad hominem, my good sir, and a logically invalid objection.” The problem, of course, is that many fallacies are perfectly good as a matter of inductive logic:
ad hominems are often highly relevant (eg if the person is being bribed). A rigorous insistence on formal syllogisms will at best waste a lot of time, and at worst becomes a tool for self-delusion by selective application of rigor.
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When accomplished young German neuroscientist Ben de Haas opened his email back in June last year - in the thick of home-schooling three children and running a busy research team in a pandemic - he couldn t have imagined what was about to happen.
The email was from PhD student Susanne Stoll at his former university in London.
Something was up. Something big.
A candid personal and scientific odyssey challenging the stigma of failure in science.
On stuffing up, why it s so vital to scientific progress itself, and.why retraction isn t necessarily a dirty word.
Guests: