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Real-Life Decision Making -- Solution

You scrap the entire theory and head back to the drawing board.

This is a good choice because it avoids the academic dishonesty of fudging the numbers. But should a few bad tests mean the end of an entire theory?

Probably not. There is nothing wrong with an imperfect theory, as long as you admit that it still needs some work.

"I think [a] thing that's really important is admitting you don't understand something," says mathematician Matt Davison. "And if you admit that you don't understand something then you have the chance to learn, whereas if you act like you always have all the answers yourself, then you're never going to learn anything because you're not going to let anyone teach you."


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