homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Psychologist claims the age of genius scientists is over

  Dean Keith Simonton, a psychology professor at the University of California, has published a comment piece in the journal Nature, where he makes a rather shocking and disturbing claim: mankind will never produce a genius like Newton, Einstein or Darwin. He claims that this will happen because we’ve already discovered all the most basic […]

Mihai Andrei
January 31, 2013 @ 11:37 am

share Share

 

Dean Keith Simonton, a psychology professor at the University of California, has published a comment piece in the journal Nature, where he makes a rather shocking and disturbing claim: mankind will never produce a genius like Newton, Einstein or Darwin. He claims that this will happen because we’ve already discovered all the most basic ideas that describe how the natural world works, and any new work will only slightly tweak our current knowledge.

albert einstein

Well now, that’s a claim – and you can be sure reactions will pop, both from in and out of the science world. After all, geniuses have been driving our society forward for hundreds of years, giving us an entirely new perspective on how things work; without them, how will we be able to make the necessary leaps ? Also, claiming that we have basically figured out how the world works… then where’s our unified theory of physics? What are memories? Is there non-carbon life based out there? What is dark energy, dark matter? These are all fundamental question we are nowhere near answering – and you can bet that many more fundamental questions (of which we can’t even think of yet) are unanswered.

Simonton has been studying geniuses and their contributions to science for more than 30 years and has even written books on them. He also claims that the way science is encourage to work nowadays, in teams instead of encouraging lonely but true insight, only adds to the problem; the past decades only offer proof in this area. He explains that after Einstein, the world has practically been devoid of such personalities.

Ultimately, Dean Keith Simonton fears that surprising originality in the natural sciences is a thing of the past, as vast teams finesse knowledge rather than create disciplines. Now, as far as I understand things, this is not something you can definitely prove or disprove, so we’re just making educated assumptions; highly educated assumptions in the case of Simonton, but still, asumptions. Come to think of it, you could have written the same study 40 years after Newton, or after Aristotle. What bugs me the most is the underlying idea that we cannot fundamentally change our view of the Universe – for me, this is nothing less than arrogance. We must not forget that we are just scratching the surface of universal knowledge, just taking baby steps towards universal knowledge; no matter how laudable and utterly fantastic our scientific discoveries are, we should always remember to put things into perspective.

Via Nature

share Share

Remote Work Promised Freedom — But Isolation and Burnout Are the Reality for Many

How freedom from the office comes with surprising challenges and trade-offs.

CCTV Cameras Are Everywhere — And They’re Changing How Your Brain Works

New research reveals how being watched triggers unconscious hyper-awareness.

Religious people aren't more generous than atheists — but there's a catch

As it turns out, there's more to generosity than just what you believe.

Can You Tell Which Knot Is Strongest? Most People Fail This Surprisingly Tough Challenge

Knots are a test of physical intuition and most of us are failing hard.

The world is super scary right now -- but some people go out of their way to seek fear on purpose. A psychologist explains why

Scary movies and haunted houses can actually be a coping mechanism that helps you survive.

The Conversational Secrets That Make AI ChatBots Feel So Human

When we interact with a chatbot, deeply ingrained habits make us behave as if it’s a person.

Bosses Who Flip-Flop Between Good and Bad Are the Worst for Employees

Bosses who switch between abusive and ethical behaviors leave their teams not only confused but also emotionally drained.

Endless digital media was supposed to cure boredom forever — except the opposite is true

Digital devices were meant to cure our boredom. So why are people feeling more bored than ever?

Do We Distrust People Because They're Poor? This Study Suggests So

It's a prevalent stereotype all over the world.

Toddlers understand the concept of impossibility — and learn better from it

Toddlers seem to understand that things can be impossible — and this helps them learn.