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That would be more convincing if the scientific papers were written in a way that make the point as clearly as the coded-up version of Monty Hall problem. In practice, it's more like they publish the assembly code and when you ask why they didn't do it in Python or something, they lecture you about the need for formal rigor.


I think there's generally selection bias about what part of an exposition makes the "a-ha" hit in two ways. First, your a-ha moment may not be the same as someone else's, but you're less likely to observe theirs. Second, your own a-ha is likely the product of a larger production than the moment itself of which you're most attuned to.

A good mathematical author must be guarding against both of these selection biases.




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