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Ivan Vendrov's avatar

I think this is why scientific culture was incubated mostly by "gentlemen" i.e. landowning aristocrats, who had a stable source of income for life that would not be imperiled by anything they said or wrote, hence why you can "trust the word of a gentleman". Our academic tenure system appears to be an attempt to replicate this, but in practice few academics take advantage of the freedom their tenure seems to afford them (perhaps correctly judging that the protection are weaker than they seem). The paradoxical conclusion is that we need to reduce the amount of accountability in research funding, and hand out larger chunks of resources to younger scholars to do with as they please. The All Souls College Examination Fellowship (https://www.asc.ox.ac.uk/examination-fellowships-general-information) is a good example of this, giving students that win a contest 7 years of funding free from all external pressure.

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Gstew2's avatar

Great point and a really interesting way to think about courage. I teach leadership classes to police managers and one of the things I talk about its the distinction between physical courage and social courage. Physical courage is actually pretty easy (not that everyone has it but of the two its easier). Social courage is much more difficult and a lot of the folks who display social courage are not even really that courageous...they are just disagreeable nature, so it comes easier to them. I suspect what I am calling social courage is closely related to your idea of low upside courage.

I will say that some institutions have set up mechanisms to overcome this. In particular both military and police tactical teams (SWAT Teams or high-speed military units) have developed debriefing systems and planning systems that make it much easier to display the low upside courage you describe. It involves a systematic process that requires some degree of self-criticism, group criticism and acknowledges that conflict in pursuit of the mission is desirable but being contentious just to be seen as right is for dumbasses (i.e., getting it right versus being right)

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