Alan Turing — "The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance, but the illusion of knowled…"
The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance, but the illusion of knowledge.
The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance, but the illusion of knowledge.
Click any product to generate a realistic preview. Up to 3 at a time.
* Initial load can take up to 90 seconds — revising the preview in another color is nearly instant.
"A computer would deserve to be called intelligent if it could deceive a human into believing that it was human."
"This is only a foretaste of what is to come, and only the shadow of what is going to be."
"I have had a dream indicating rather clearly that I am on the way to being hetero, though I don't accept it with much enthusiasm either awake or in the dreams."
"The machine is only as good as the man who programs it."
"The human brain is an electrical machine."
Attributed to various people, including Daniel Boorstin, not definitively Turing.
Date: Unknown
GeneralFound in 1 providers: grok
1 source checked
Not knowing something is less dangerous than falsely believing you understand it. True ignorance at least keeps the mind open — you know you need to learn. False certainty kills curiosity: you stop questioning, reject contradictory evidence, and miss breakthroughs hiding in plain sight. Real discovery demands intellectual humility, the willingness to challenge what feels obvious and stay genuinely open to being wrong. The confident expert who thinks they know is often the biggest barrier to progress.
Turing spent his career dismantling certainties others treated as settled. At Bletchley Park, he ignored conventional wisdom about Enigma and engineered the Bombe where experts saw impossibility. His computability proofs shattered the prevailing assumption that all mathematical problems were decidable. His belief that machines could think flew directly against the certainty of colleagues and philosophers. Turing's greatest breakthroughs came precisely by refusing to accept what everyone around him already knew.
The mid-20th century was defined by dangerous institutional certainties. Nazi Germany deployed Enigma believing it mathematically unbreakable. The scientific establishment dismissed machine intelligence as inherently impossible. Gödel had just shattered mathematical foundations with incompleteness theorems, yet formal logic still assumed decidability. Governments prosecuted homosexuality with confidence about biological normalcy. Across warfare, science, and society, the era demonstrated how entrenched false certainties — not mere ignorance — caused the greatest catastrophes and blocked the most important advances.
AI-generated insights based on extensive research and information for context. Factual errors? Email [email protected].
Your cart is empty