Yazata
Active Member
You learned at university that you should put your faith in what your professors and textbooks tell you?
Sure.
If a professor lectures on something or if a student reads it in a textbook, he or she is most likely going to accept it as probably true, or as the best that's known at present, or something like that. When that student takes an exam, that's the material that will count as a right answer. When the graduate is hired, it's what employers will expect them to know.
When a molecular biology student learns about bioenergetics, glycolysis, electron transport, oxidative phosphorylation, chromosomes and chromatin, or cell membrane structure, where do you think they hear about those things?
Imagine an engineer. If he or she needs to know some physical constant or some details about the properties of some material, that engineer is apt to consult a standard reference like the CRC Handbook. And that engineer is going to have considerable confidence that the information there is correct, to the point of basing his or her own calculations on it.
In a word, we learn from those who came before us. Most of what a person knows, was learned that way.
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