“Scientific Knowledge Can Lie Beyond Language”

By Arthur M. Diamond, Jr.
First Posted to The Institute of Arts and Ideas web site on Weds., March 25, 2026

An experienced nurse in the neonate intensive care unit is mostly focused on the infant who is her main responsibility. But she notices that a nearby infant is cycling through minor changes in skin color. That infant’s primary nurse sees it too. The infant then turns blue-black. The experienced nurse knows it is pneumopericardium, where air pressure around the heart keeps the heart from sending blood into the infant’s body. She knows it because she had been the nurse for an infant who died from pneumopericardium. The heart monitor misleadingly seems to show that the heart is still beating, so the infant’s primary nurse thinks the problem is a collapsed lung. As the chief doctor arrives the experienced nurse “slaps a syringe in his hand” and tells him to “stick the heart” to release the air. An x-ray tech confirms the diagnosis, the doctor acts, and the infant lives.

The experienced nurse was out of line. The infant who lived was not her responsibility and it was not her job to tell the chief doctor what to do. She could have been punished, but she took a chance and acted on intuitive knowledge that she could not immediately articulate. She had intuition that proved correct and her acting on her intuition was literally a matter of life and death. But we set up barriers to discourage ourselves and others from acting on our intuition. We establish regulations, credentials, protocols, manuals.

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Breakthrough innovative entrepreneurs often have limited formal theoretical knowledge, but high levels of informal unarticulated knowledge.

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Dr Min Chiu Li was an oncologist at the National Cancer Institute in the US in the early days of administering methotrexate chemotherapy to women who had choriocarcinoma cancer. The NCI protocol mandated that when the visible symptoms of cancer were gone, he should stop chemotherapy. But he had an intuition that small amounts of cancer still lurked after the visible symptoms were gone. So he violated the protocol and gave his patients a longer course of chemotherapy. The administrators at the NCI fired Min Chiu Li for violating the protocol, but later were surprised to observe that the patients treated according to the protocol were dead, and the patients treated by Min Chiu Li were alive.

In my book Openness to Creative Destruction I argue that breakthrough innovative entrepreneurs often have limited formal theoretical knowledge, but high levels of informal unarticulated knowledge. Henry Ford, Bill Gates, and Steve Jobs did not graduate from college. What is true of innovative entrepreneurs is also often true of innovative scientists. When James Watson and Francis Crick had lunch with famous biochemist Erwin Chargaff, Crick could not remember the well-known chemical details of the four bases of DNA. Chargaff dismissed the pair with contempt. Watson and Crick did not excel in the memorization of theory but had intuition that allowed them to see the double-helix structure of DNA. AI expert Melanie Mitchell and cognitive psychologist Gary Klein agree that we have more unarticulated knowledge than articulated knowledge.

But we too seldom ask: how useful is it? Or an even better question is: how useful could it be if we sought to make good use of it rather than sought to ignore or block it? Unarticulated knowledge deserves deeper study, and Klein is one of those who has made a start. Over his career he has modified his taxonomy of the types of unarticulated knowledge. What I am calling “unarticulated knowledge” he calls “tacit knowledge,” a label I prefer to reserve for the kind of muscle-memory bike-riding example the phrase’s originator, Michael Polanyi, made famous. In one of his later efforts, Klein distinguishes five types of unarticulated knowledge: Perceptual, Conceptual, Embodied, Social, and Metacognitive. The type I am most concerned with in this article is the Conceptual, within which he includes: “pattern recognition; mental models; expectancies; mindsets; noticing the absence of expected events; imagining antecedents and anticipating consequences; seeing affordances.”

The size and importance of unarticulated knowledge has implications for the current worries that the growth of AI will create widespread job loss. If worker productivity depends importantly on their unarticulated knowledge, and if AI models are trained solely on databases of articulated knowledge, then we have built-in limits on the extent to which AI can replace humans in the labor market.

The level of regulations in the US has steadily increased over many decades, at the same time that the number of breakthrough innovations has fallen (see also Graeber 2012; Huebner 2005). We may be wrong to rely so much on regulations, credentials, protocols, and manuals, but we do not do so out of simple stupidity or evil intent. We do so for several plausible reasons.

One of the reasons is because unarticulated knowledge is often called (including by Klein and me) “intuition” and we associate intuition with mysticism, knowing that mystics have often made predictions that proved false. We also know that our intuition is sometimes systematically biased in a variety of ways. Daniel Kahneman has many examples in his Thinking, Fast and Slow, including, for example, the anchoring effect, confirmation bias, and loss aversion.

But Klein thinks we sell ourselves short if we dismiss intuition. The intuition that he defends is based on experienced patterns, not mystical epiphany. This kind of intuition is on solid ground partly because it often can be articulated when we have enough time to do so, and when it is worth the time to do so.

In a life-and-death case, Lieutenant Commander Michael Riley on the British HMS Gloucester had about 90 seconds to decide if the object coming towards them on the radar was a friendly American plane or a hostile Silkworm missile. Riley was sure the object was hostile, and at the last second shot it down. He could not explain how he had known and why he was sure. By asking a series of shrewd probing questions, Klein teased out how Riley had known that the blip was hostile. Although the plane and the Silkworm flew at different altitudes, the radar did not directly report altitude. But experienced and focused users of the radar could infer altitude from the distance from the shore when a blip first became visible. In this case, Riley did not have the time to articulate the unarticulated, but later Klein, with Riley’s help, proved that it could be done.

Another reason we rely so much on regulations, credentials, protocols, and manuals is that we worry that we have no good way of judging other people’s claims to have unarticulated knowledge. So we worry that the unscrupulous might take advantage of us. This worry often arises in situations subject to what economists call “the principal-agent problem.” The problem arises when the principal pays the agent to do a task; then the agent takes the money but doesn’t do the task.

The principal-agent problem often exists even when we are dealing with articulated knowledge. An increasing number of scientific journal articles and grant proposals are fraudulent. The journals and the grant agencies are paying (in terms of resume entries and money grants) for bogus research. A prominent sad example is Alzheimer’s research. Charles Piller, a journalist at the distinguished journal Science, has expanded his exposé articles into the book Doctored, documenting that much of the leading research has been fraudulent, helping to explain why progress against this major disease has been so limited. The victims include first and foremost those suffering from Alzheimer’s, but also the taxpayers who fund government research grants, and the Alzheimer’s researchers whose honest but modest results have been rejected for publication and grants because they falsely seem inferior to the fraudulent results.

So we guard against unarticulated knowledge because we worry that if we can be so extensively defrauded when we are dealing with claims of articulated knowledge, how much more extensively will we be defrauded if we do not protect ourselves against claims of unarticulated knowledge?

The principal-agent problem is even more severe in common situations where the principal is acting as a fiduciary for others. So a government grant-giver has a moral duty to act prudently since he is acting as a fiduciary for the taxpayer. And a venture-capital fund investor has a moral duty to act prudently since he is acting as a fiduciary for the investors in his fund.

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We should seek opportunities to fund on the basis of performance, not based on committee evaluation of written proposals.

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This contrasts with angel investors who invest their own money and so can morally take greater risks based on more tenuous hunches. When the Omaha billionaire Walter Scott spoke to one of my classes I asked if he had been aware of the technological concerns George Gilder had about the Level 3 fiber optics network firm in which Scott had heavily invested. His somewhat gruff response was that he didn’t know technology, but he did know Jim Crowe, the founder of Level 3. Scott was spending his own money so he was not violating any fiduciary responsibility in mistakenly investing in Level 3.

When the principal and the agent are the same person, the principal-agent problem disappears. When the principal is spending their own money, the principal-agent problem is at least mitigated.

We can avoid the principal-agent problem by making it easier for entrepreneurs and scientists to self-fund their ventures and research, thus avoiding the principal-agent problem. For entrepreneurs this can be done by letting them keep the funds that they earn through successful entrepreneurship. Those who have given us the fullest proof of the value of their innovation by succeeding in the marketplace, are allowed to keep the wealth they thereby earn, so they can try it again. These are the serial innovative entrepreneurs like Commodore Vanderbilt, Steve Jobs, and Elon Musk. (The builders of a new computer in Tracy Kidder’s The Soul of a New Machine, compared what they were doing to the game of pinball, where the reward for doing it well is the chance to do it again.)

New York Times financial columnist Andrew Ross Sorkin wrote a column criticizing Steve Jobs for not signing onto the Bill Gates Foundation pledge to give the foundation a large part of his wealth. Jobs was famously known for his intuition about which new products would be “insanely great.” By retaining wealth from previous successes, he could quickly pivot to the next “insanely great” product as a new idea emerged, without having to articulate and sell the idea to a board of directors or to venture capitalists or to Wall Street. So we should encourage successful innovative entrepreneurs to reject the advice of Andrew Ross Sorkin, and instead hold onto their wealth. And we should oppose legislation being proposed in the US Senate to tax all substantial wealth, including that of deserving serial innovative entrepreneurs.

If a successful innovative entrepreneur runs out of new ideas himself, then rather than use his wealth for general charity, he should try to find and invest in other would-be-innovative entrepreneurs who share the traits that enabled the innovative entrepreneur’s own success. (PayPal entrepreneur Peter Thiel and Netscape entrepreneur Marc Andreesen are following this advice.)

We should seek opportunities to fund on the basis of performance, not based on committee evaluation of written proposals. George Stephenson had no formal education and was not very articulate. He could not give a good explanation of why the safety lamp he invented would prevent miners from dying of gas explosions. But he proved it by entering a mine with the lamp and walking toward a chamber known to contain gas. Later and more famously, Stephenson’s Rocket locomotive was not the sleekest looking in the Rainhill Trials contest, and Stephenson was not the most articulate defender of his entry, but unlike the other locomotives that in one way or another broke down, the Rocket kept chugging along. DARPA is one of the more successful government funders of new technology. They often fund based on contests. The X-prizes, founded by Peter Diamandis, are a private-sector effort to fund based on performance.

To reduce the principal-agent problem in science, we should be more open to citizen scientists self-funding their own research, as was commonly done in an earlier period of science, and as has recently been done by neuroscientist Jeff Hawkins, who earned his wealth by being the entrepreneur who developed the successful PalmPilot personal data assistant. The motto of the first scientific society, the Royal Society of England, was Nullius in verba (take no one’s word for it), meaning that anyone who was willing to show the evidence for their findings could participate in science. Make citizen science respectable again. Even today, not all successful innovative scientists rise through the Ivy league or through Oxford and Cambridge.

We should also experiment to find better ways to fund science where self-funding is not possible. We should consider Robin Hanson’s institutional innovation of a betting market where would-be scientists could bet on scientific propositions. Besides finding ways for would-be scientists to self-fund, we should find ways to reduce the amount of funds needed to participate. Universities could be made more efficient. The costs of entry to doing science in some disciplines is already low; citizen scientists make important contributions to astronomy, archeology, and botany. And the costs of contributing to science in other areas should be reduced by reducing regulations.

More broadly we can encourage managers at all levels to give decision rights to their employees. Assign them domains of action where they will not be micro-managed, where they can be alert to patterns and act on the patterns they observe, where they can make use of their unarticulated intuition. Within those domains the employee is not second-guessed by a micro-managing boss or a detailed operational manual.

BIBLIOGRAPHY (not posted in IAI online version):

Barber, Charles. In the Blood: How Two Outsiders Solved a Centuries-Old Medical Mystery and Took on the Us Army. New York: Grand Central Publishing, 2023.

Christensen, Clayton M., and Henry J. Eyring. The Innovative University: Changing the DNA of Higher Education from the inside Out. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass, 2011.

Cowen, Tyler. The Great Stagnation: How America Ate All the Low-Hanging Fruit of Modern History, Got Sick, and Will (Eventually) Feel Better. New York: Dutton Adult, 2011.

DeVita, Vincent T., and Elizabeth DeVita-Raeburn. The Death of Cancer: After Fifty Years on the Front Lines of Medicine, a Pioneering Oncologist Reveals Why the War on Cancer Is Winnable–and How We Can Get There. New York: Sarah Crichton Books, 2015.

Diamandis, Peter H., and Steven Kotler. Bold: How to Go Big, Create Wealth and Impact the World. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2015.

Diamond, Arthur M., Jr. “How to Cure Cancer: Unbinding Entrepreneurs in Medicine.” Journal of Entrepreneurship and Public Policy 7, no. 1 (2018): 62–73.

Diamond, Arthur M., Jr. Openness to Creative Destruction: Sustaining Innovative Dynamism. New York: Oxford University Press, 2019.

Gigerenzer, Gerd. Gut Feelings: The Intelligence of the Unconscious. New York: Penguin Books, 2007.

Graeber, David. “Of Flying Cars and the Declining Rate of Profit.” The Baffler, no. 19 (2012). https://thebaffler.com/salvos/of-flying-cars-and-the-declining-rate-of-profit

Hanson, Robin. “Could Gambling Save Science? Encouraging an Honest Consensus.” Social Epistemology 9, no. 1 (Jan.-March 1995): 3–33.

Hawkins, Jeff. A Thousand Brains: A New Theory of Intelligence. New York: Basic Books, 2021.

Hawkins, Jeff, and Sandra Blakeslee. On Intelligence. New York: Times Books, 2004.

Huebner, Jonathan. “A Possible Declining Trend for Worldwide Innovation.” Technological Forecasting and Social Change 72, no. 8 (Oct. 2005): 980–86.

Jena, Anupam B., and Christopher M. Worsham. Random Acts of Medicine: The Hidden Forces That Sway Doctors, Impact Patients, and Shape Our Health. New York: Doubleday, 2023.

Jenkins, Tania M. Doctors’ Orders: The Making of Status Hierarchies in an Elite Profession. New York: Columbia University Press, 2020.

Kahneman, Daniel. Thinking, Fast and Slow. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2011.

Kidder, Tracy. The Soul of a New Machine. 1st ed. Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1981.

Klein, Gary A. Sources of Power: How People Make Decisions. 20th Anniversary ed. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, [1997] 2017.

Klein, Gary A. “Unpacking Tacit Knowledge; Applying the Tacit Knowledge Concept More Effectively.” Psychology Today, 2023. https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/seeing-what-others-dont/202307/unpacking-tacit-knowledge

Landes, David S. “Why Europe and the West? Why Not China?” Journal of Economic Perspectives 20, no. 2 (Spring 2006): 3–22.

McLaughlin, Patrick A., and Oliver Sherouse. “The Impact of Federal Regulation on the 50 States, 2016 Edition.” Arlington, VA: Mercatus Center, 2016.

Mitchell, Melanie. Melanie Mitchell on Artificial Intelligence. EconTalk, interviewed by Russ Roberts, Jan. 6. 2020. https://www.econtalk.org/melanie-mitchell-on-artificial-intelligence/

Park, Michael, Erin Leahey, and Russell J. Funk. “Papers and Patents Are Becoming Less Disruptive over Time.” Nature 613, no. 7942 (Jan. 2023): 138–44.

Piller, Charles. Doctored: Fraud, Arrogance, and Tragedy in the Quest to Cure Alzheimer’s. New York: Atria/One Signal Publishers, 2025.

Polanyi, Michael. Personal Knowledge: Towards a Post-Critical Philosophy. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1958.

Polanyi, Michael. The Tacit Dimension. Garden City, New York: Doubleday & Co., 1966.

Prentice, Claire. “Miracle at Coney Island: How a Sideshow Doctor Saved Thousands of Babies and Transformed American Medicine.” Kindle Single, 2016.

Richardson, Reese A. K., Spencer S. Hong, Jennifer A. Byrne, Thomas Stoeger, and Luís A. Nunes Amaral. “The Entities Enabling Scientific Fraud at Scale Are Large, Resilient, and Growing Rapidly.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 122, no. 32 (2025): e2420092122.

Rosen, William. The Most Powerful Idea in the World: A Story of Steam, Industry, and Invention. New York: Random House, 2010.

Smiles, Samuel. The Locomotive: George and Robert Stephenson. New and Revised ed, Lives of the Engineers. London: John Murray, Albemarle Street, 1879.

Sorkin, Andrew Ross. “Dealbook; the Mystery of Steve Jobs’s Public Giving.” The New York Times (Tues., Aug. 30, 2011): B1 & B4.

Watson, James D. The Double Helix: A Personal Account of the Discovery of the Structure of DNA. New York: Scribner Classics, [1968] 2011.

The article above was published behind a paywall on the web site of The Institute of Art and Ideas. I retain the copyright, so I am reposting the article here. I submitted a bibliography and internal parenthetical references, but following their usual formatting, they did not post those, but instead incorporated select web links to some of the sources. My submitted title was “Making the Most of Unarticulated Knowledge.” IAI did not like that title, so they chose: “Scientific Knowledge Can Lie Beyond Language.” I did not veto their title although I regretted that it neglected the practical implications of my article, which to me are as important as the scientific implications. The citation for the original posting of the article on IAI is:

Diamond, Arthur M. “Scientific Knowledge Can Lie Beyond Language.” Posted on March 25, 2026. The Institute of Arts and Ideas. Available from https://iai.tv/articles/scientific-knowledge-can-lie-beyond-language-auid-3530.

To Preserve the Status Quo the Wealthy Elite Gives the Poor “Little Gifts” from Their “Largess”

What Barton Swaim (quoted below) says was true of the “predemocratic, precapitalist European noble” is today usually true of an allegedly progressive and allegedly empathetic member of the wealthy elite who pities the poor and gives them “little gifts from his largess” mostly as a form of virtue signaling; but who then also usually supports government regulations that preserve his own wealth and elite status by blocking the poor from themselves becoming wealthy.

(p. A11) The socialist outlook—. . .—may inspire struggle in the immediate present, but the practical goal is tranquility, . . . : an attitude not so different from that of a predemocratic, precapitalist European noble hoping to keep his subjects more or less content with little gifts from his largess.

For the full interview/essay see:

Barton Swaim. “What’s the Matter With Scotland?” The Wall Street Journal (Sat., Dec. 6, 2025): A11.

(Note: ellipses added.)

(Note: the online version of the interview/essay has the date December 5, 2025, and has the same title as the print version.)

Believe the Barbarity of “Bygone Backwaters”

Critics of modern civilization think humans have lost a Golden Age we once had in the distant past. Closer to the truth was Hobbes’s observation that life in the distant past was “poor, nasty, brutish, and short.” An earlier entry in this blog shows a photo of an ancient skull-cup dug up by archeologists in England.

(p. R3) . . . while the fearsome Scythian hordes who stalked the Eurasian steppe might show you some hospitality by inviting you to dinner, Herodotus warned that you should be prepared to have your drink served to you in a human skull.

For millennia, sensational accounts like these were all that was known about these bygone backwaters of the ancient world. But according to Owen Rees, they are more a reflection of their writers’ bigoted imaginations than the truth. In “The Far Edges of the Known World,” Mr. Rees, a researcher at Birmingham Newman University and the lead editor of badancient.com, a website that fact-checks common claims about the ancient world, seeks to remedy these misapprehensions.

. . .

While Mr. Rees is keen to dispel the myths ginned up by imperial writers, he doesn’t prevaricate when the evidence shows that their fears may not have been entirely unfounded. Though he makes a heroic effort to show that the Scythians were not the one-dimensional brutes the Greeks believed them to be, he also admits that recent excavations in present-day Bilsk, Ukraine, seem to show that they really did drink from human skulls as Herodotus said.

For the full review see:

Michael Patrick Brady. “Meeting Ancient Strangers.” The Wall Street Journal (Sat., Oct. 11, 2025): R3.

(Note: ellipses added.)

(Note: the online version of the review has the date October 10, 2025, and has the title “‘The Far Edges of the Known World’ Review: Ancient Strangers.”)

The book under review is:

Rees, Owen. The Far Edges of the Known World: Life Beyond the Borders of Ancient Civilization. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2025.

Arthur Diamond’s “Scientific Knowledge Can Lie Beyond Language” Posted at The Institute of Art and Ideas Web Platform

My agreement with iai allows me to separately post my article, which I plan to do in a future blog post. The title as it appears on the iai platform was chosen by the iai editors. I preferred a title that emphasized the implications of unarticulated knowledge for practice, not just for science. I had the right, if I objected strongly to their title, to veto it. I chose not to veto.

Arthur Diamond’s “The Innovative Entrepreneur” 2018 Presentation on YouTube

I presented “The Innovative Entrepreneur” at the Create “N” Festival at Northern State University in Aberdeen, South Dakota on Sept. 19, 2018 to an audience that was open to the general public, but consisted mainly of undergraduates. At the time of the presentation, I was wrapping up the writing of his book Openness to Creative Destruction: Sustaining Innovative Dynamism that was published by Oxford University Press in June 2019. The topics of the presentation overlap with some of those in the book–on how innovative entrepreneurs make our lives better, and on how the challenges faced by innovative entrepreneurs can be hard but rewarding.

Technology Was Democratized When Standardization of Parts Enabled Simplification of Manufacture and Maintenance

There’s a lot to like about Steward Brand. His Whole Earth Catalog was quirky unpretentious fun. His How Buildings Learn, has a wonderful chapter on the ramshackle, unnamed, disrespected building on the MIT campus where quirky innovators were given space to create. His essay on Xerox Parc explained how the technology being developed there could liberate individual creativity. When Steve Jobs at Stanford delivered what is widely believed to be the best commencement address in history, he ended by quoting Stewart Brand’s final message in the 1974 Whole Earth Catalog: “Stay hungry, stay foolish.”

In the review quoted below, highlights that the simplification of production enabled by standardization of parts promoted the democratization of technology maintenance (and we might add, helped to democratize innovation too). Major simplification goes against the Theory of the Adjacent Possible which claims that technology develops toward greater and greater complexity.

(p. C7) Read front to back, “Maintenance” tells a coherent story of civilizational progress. Prior to the Industrial Revolution, most machines were one-off creations, built by artisans to their own quirky specifications. But the technological age increasingly demanded standardization. Weapons led the way. If a cannonball jammed in an imprecisely bored barrel, the cannon might explode, killing its crew. On the other hand, if the parts of a flintlock rifle were interchangeable, a soldier could repair his weapon without the need for a gunsmith.

The manufacturing techniques that enabled this kind of precision gradually spread to other technologies. The same tools developed to bore cannon barrels were then used to improve steam engines. But standardization had its enemies, Mr. Brand notes, especially among gunsmiths and other artisans. During the French Revolution, the sansculottes rebelled against the new industrial techniques. “Craft was extolled; uniformity was deplored,” Mr. Brand writes. France’s technical progress was set back 50 years.

A century later, the early automobile industry faced a similar split. The original Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost, Mr. Brand writes, “was manufactured as a bespoke, unique vehicle, meticulously crafted by a dedicated team.” Henry Ford’s Model T, by contrast, was a crude but ingeniously simple machine. Ford made sure each part was manufactured to unvarying specifications, “perfect enough” that it could be installed by a moderately skilled worker on a moving assembly line. No fine-tuning needed.

Ford’s embrace of standardization allowed his Model T to be built quickly and inexpensively. But standardization had another, paradoxical effect: It allowed nonexperts to repair their own vehicles and other equipment. A farmer who owned a Model T didn’t need a forge or metal lathe to fix his engine; he could simply order a replacement part—or cannibalize one from a wrecked car in a junkyard.

The French revolutionaries feared industrialization would depersonalize society by marginalizing skilled artisans. Mr. Brand shows that, instead, standardization democratized access to technology. With a few tools and a little gumption, anyone could learn to maintain and repair the machinery of daily life.

For the full review see:

James B. Meigs. “Fixing the Future.” The Wall Street Journal (Sat., Dec. 6, 2025): C7.

(Note: the online version of the review has the date December 5, 2025, and has the title “‘Maintenance: Of Everything, Part One’: Making the Future.”)

The book under review is:

Brand, Stewart. Maintenance of Everything: Part One. South San Francisco, CA: Stripe Press, 2026.

An earlier Brand book that I praised in my opening comments is:

Brand, Stewart. How Buildings Learn: What Happens after They’re Built. New York: Viking Adult, 1994.

Thomas Jefferson Thanked Edward Jenner for Advocating Vaccine

As a classical liberal, and an advocate for faster innovation, I am sympathetic to much in the health freedom movement. But I think some in the movement are making a mistake in being opposed to all vaccines. Some vaccines have done some harm, but overall the best vaccines are some of the greatest advances in medicine. I like Thomas Jefferson’s statement in the passage from the review quoted below.

(p. C8) In the 1780s Thomas Jefferson was serving as a diplomat in France when the Marquis de Lafayette brought him a message of unwelcome news from Virginia: His young daughter Lucy had died of whooping cough. The letter did not spare the absent father the grim truth: “Her sufferings were great.” Jefferson ultimately buried four of his children (including two girls named Lucy). He knew what he was saying when he wrote appreciatively to Edward Jenner, the English physician who discovered vaccination, that “medicine has never before produced any single improvement of such utility.”

For the full review see:

Kyle Harper. “Sickness And Civilization.” The Wall Street Journal (Sat., Jan. 24, 2026): C7-C8.

(Note: the online version of the review has the date January 23, 2026, and has the title “‘The Great Shadow’: Sickness and Civilization.”)

The book under review is:

Bauer, Susan Wise. The Great Shadow: A History of How Sickness Shapes What We Do, Think, Believe, and Buy. New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2026.

Frank Knight on the Leader of the V-Formation of Ducks

I write this on Thurs., Feb. 19, 2026. Yesterday evening, I was reading a section of Milton and Rose Friedman’s Free to Choose on the Negative Income Tax, as part of my revising a paper I have submitted to The Independent Review. As I was reading, I was surprised and numbly elated to serendipitously run across information that I had been seeking, off and on, literally for decades. Every so often I had occasion to tell a story that I was sure originated with Frank Knight. I wrote the script on Frank Knight for an audio series on Great Economists. (The current owners of the series refuse to pay me the royalties that I am owed, but that is another story.) So I thought I knew something about Knight, and own many books and articles by him. Every once in a while I spent an hour or so looking for the quotation, always failing. I even emailed Ross Emmett who many view as the current leading expert on Knight. He said he knew nothing of the quote I sought.

Buddhists who are totally at peace do not carry around with them the annoyance of unanswered questions, so if they run across an answer, it means nothing to them. Maybe this helps understand what Pasteur meant when he lectured that “chance favors only the prepared mind” (1854). The prepared mind carries around unanswered questions, unresolved contradictions, flaws in the world that could use improving. Then that mind stays alert for answers to the questions, resolutions to the contradictions, fixes for the flaws. The mind that pulls us forward is not a mind at peace.

[As an addendum, my discovery of the quote in Milton and Rose Friedman’s most famous book, after many searches in much more obscure places, reminds me of what Gertrude Himmelfarb said in a lecture at the U. of Chicago when I was a graduate student many decades ago. She searched the dusty archives long and hard, but the material most useful for her book on Harriet Taylor’s influence on Mill’s On Liberty, was hiding in plain sight in a volume written by F.A. Hayek on Mill’s correspondence with Taylor.]

Here after decades of occasional search and constant alertness, is the testimony of Milton and Rose, two former students of Frank Knight, showing that my memory of the Frank Knight duck V-formation story was not a dream or hallucination:

Our great and revered teacher Frank H. Knight was fond of illustrating different forms of leadership with ducks that fly in a V with a leader in front. Every now and then, he would say, the ducks behind the leader would veer off in a different direction while the leader continued flying ahead. When the leader looked around and saw that no one was following, he would rush to get in front of the V again. That is one form of leadership—undoubtedly the most prevalent form in Washington.

Source of Milton and Rose quote is:

Steve Lohr. “A.I. Is Poised to Put Midsize Cities on the Map.” The New York Times (Mon., December 30, 2025): B1-B2.

The Himmelfarb book mentioned in my initial comments is:

Himmelfarb, Gertrude. On Liberty and Liberalism: The Case of John Stuart Mill. New York: Knopf, 1974.

The Hayek book mentioned in my initial comments is:

Hayek, F.A. John Stuart Mill and Harriet Taylor: Their Friendship and Subsequent Marriage. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1951. [Some citations to the book have the word “Correspondence” substituted for “Friendship.”]


Entrepreneurs Make Leaps: A Critique of the Theory of the Adjacent Possible (TAP)

In my Openness book, I argue that the innovative entrepreneur is a key agent of the innovative dynamism that brings us the new goods and the process innovations through which we flourish. The Theory of the Adjacent Possible, devised by Stuart Kauffman, Roger Koppl, and collaborators, and popularized by Steven Johnson, aims to “deflate” the innovative entrepreneur, and argues that technological progress is an inevitable result of a stochastic process. I have written an extended critique of the TAP, and have posted the latest version to the SSRN working paper archive. In some ways the working paper, especially the last half, can be viewed as further elaboration and illustration of some of the points made in Openness.

The citation for, and link to, my working paper is:

Diamond, Arthur M. “Entrepreneurs Make Leaps: A Critique of the Theory of the Adjacent Possible.” (Written Jan. 26, 2026; Posted Feb. 18, 2026). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=6166326

My book mentioned in my initial comments is:

Diamond, Arthur M., Jr. Openness to Creative Destruction: Sustaining Innovative Dynamism. New York: Oxford University Press, 2019.


“Several Biting Critiques of the Red-Tape State”

I have been so intrigued by reviews of books by Philip K. Howard that I have bought four of them. I am chagrined to admit that I have not yet read any of them–I am a slow reader, and have a long to-do list. But when I saw Howard’s suggestions of books that critique government red-tape, I made the to-do list even longer.

(p. R5) American government is overdue for a spring-cleaning, so I was delighted to read several biting critiques of the red-tape state, especially Marc Dunkelman’s “Why Nothing Works” and Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson’s “Abundance.” What’s needed is a philosophical shift toward human agency and accountability. In “The Origins of Efficiency,” Brian Potter reveals the role of human ingenuity in refining modern technologies. In “Humanocracy,” Gary Hamel and Michele Zanini describe how decentralizing individual responsibility helps businesses thrive. Barry Lam’s “Fewer Rules, Better People” shows why fairness requires judgment on the spot. Without human oversight, systems always take on a life of their own.

The source for Philip K. Howard’s book suggestions is:

Philip K. Howard. “Who Read What in 2025: Philip K. Howard.” The Wall Street Journal (Saturday, Dec. 13, 2025): R5.

(Note: the online version of Howard’s suggestions has the date December 12, 2025.)

The books suggested by Howard are:

Dunkelman, Marc J. Why Nothing Works: Who Killed Progress―and How to Bring It Back. New York: PublicAffairs, 2025.

Hamel, Gary, and Michele Zanini. Humanocracy: Creating Organizations as Amazing as the People inside Them. Revised & Updated ed: Harvard Business School Press, 2025.

Klein, Ezra, and Derek Thompson. Abundance. New York: Avid Reader Press, 2025.

Lam, Barry. Fewer Rules, Better People: The Case for Discretion. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2025.

Potter, Brian. The Origins of Efficiency. South San Francisco, CA: Stripe Press, 2025.

Minimum Wage Advocates Forget That When the Price of Labor Rises, the Quantity Demanded Falls

George Stigler and many others point out that no law in economics is as certain as the Law of Demand: if the price rises, the quantity demanded falls. That applies to goods and labor too. In principles classes I would illustrate the law in several ways, including applying it to the effects of increasing the minimum wage. Much of the empirical work on minimum wages has been done by David Neumark. In December 2025 he posted a revision of his co-authored paper “Minimum Wages and Race Disparities.” Below is the paper abstract:

We provide a comprehensive analysis of the effects of minimum wages on blacks, and on the relative impacts on blacks vs. whites. We study not only teenagers – the focus of much of the minimum wage-employment literature – but also broader low-skill groups. We find evidence that job loss effects from higher minimum wages are more evident for blacks – and more so for black men. In contrast, they are not very detectable for whites. Moreover, the effects of minimum wages are often large enough to generate adverse effects on earnings (and relative earnings) of blacks. Given strong residential segregation by race in the United States, the race difference in the effects of minimum wages implies that the adverse impacts fall on areas with a high black population share. We also find evidence that minimum wage effects are more adverse in black areas, regardless of individual race, which accentuates the concentration of the adverse effects of minimum wages in areas where blacks are a very high share of the population.

Neumark’s co-authored paper is:

Neumark, David, and Jyotsana Kala. “Minimum Wages and Race Disparities.” National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper #33167, Dec. 2025.