Galley Skills
Skills which, requiring a lot of talent, learning and practice, eventually trap the skilled person into moving in a direction about which he or she has no say. Examples:
1. There are only limited alternatives for an appropriately trained biochemist other than to work in the field of biotechnology.
2. Molecular scientists are likewise drawn into nanotechnology.
3. There is little nuclear physicists can do other than design, build and operate nuclear power stations.
4. The most able economists are able to build mathematical models of the economy which may be more brilliant than they are useful (Reductio ad Absurdum).
At worst, galley skills can elaborate dominant models which threaten to destroy us. You have to be brilliant for your scientific contribution to the current predicament to be truly catastrophic.
Related entries:
Cognitive Dissonance, Sunk Cost Fallacy, Metamorphosis.
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