I will reply in two posts – this post will discuss the lone wolf versus the establishment concern (the crackpot versus the rest of the civilized world etc.). First let me quote from Michael Lewis's MoneyBall
Lewis Michael. Moneyball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game. 2003. said:
Seven years into his literary career, in the 1984 Baseball Abstract, [Bill] James formally gave up any hope that baseball insiders would be reasonable. "When I started writing I thought if I proved X was a stupid thing to do that people would stop doing X" he said. "I was wrong." …
A full decade after James stopped writing his Abstracts, there were still two fresh opportunities for a team willing to take them to heart. One was simply to take the knowledge developed by James and other analysts outside the game, and implement it inside the game. The other was to develop and extend that knowledge.
... The whole point of James was don't be an ape! Think for yourself along rational lines. Hypothesize, test against the evidence, never accept that a question has been answered as well as it ever will be. Don't believe a thing is true just because some famous baseball player says that it is true.
Actually what Bill James faced was not just one famous baseball player, but the combined school of thought about baseball developed over many decades.
Here we have a similar situation, the vast expert consensus versus a few “random non-famous” types suggesting possible improvements.
I don’t think anybody should feel offended by Fred’s postings here, as he clearly speaks the truth, even though it might not be nice to hear for some. Lone wolves just have to accept they are not running with the pack. In particular:
>> Fred is not rejecting the idea on the basis of its merits (or lack of them) – he is dismissing it for an advancing player solely because it is not commonly played in the expert community – this is quite typical with the introduction of new approaches and lone wolves need to accept that it happens all the time - Bill James faced this, and so did those, for another example, who believed in aircraft carriers instead of battleships.
>> Fred is not “condescending” when he points out the lone wolves have no proven track record in which to authenticate their ability to discuss these matters. This is simply a reality check. In bridge we have seen quite poor players attempt to pass themselves as world class professionals. I’ve personally seen, nobody in our present company of course, a number of somewhat clueless people write bridge books presented as expert advice.
>> Kind and sympathic reviews of an idea (or a set of ideas), in book and article format, are not sufficient to elevate an idea into best-of-class or better-than-the-experts status. It just means that the book or article presented thought provoking ideas in a decently written manner. Endorsement of the ideas arrives when the top players use the ideas.
I think it is fair for Fred to have made his comments to the person looking for advice. I also believe those who have taken offence from his comments are out-of-line. While it is disappointing for inventors that Fred has decreased the number of guinea pigs available to try out new ideas, he is giving advancing players good advice to stay on the well-trodden path instead of trampling through the untamed forest.
Take an advancing partnership that takes up cuebids as in this thread, and assume that the partnership, at some point, finds themselves unable to reach a good slam on a hand. Afterwards, they consult with a local expert, and guess what they find out – not how to cuebid the hand better, but they are playing the “wrong” methods. If they had used pattern showing methods, and were not able to reach a slam, the expert could provide valuable input into how they could have judged the mesh of values on the hand and suggested a potential sequence to get to the slam. Thus playing the expert consensus methods confers an advantage beyond the method itself.
I believe inventors need to leave the taking up of their ideas to the early adopters, who get enjoyment at being the first to try out the very latest. It is a poor service to the bridge community for inventors to present their ideas as mainstream ready when they are just a few years off the drawing board. Instead the inventors need to understand what the current practices are, accept (and relish) their status as lone wolves, and live with the put downs of their ideas simply because they are new. It’s all part and parcel of being a “mad scientist” leading the way.