I would say that failure has also be romanticized in certainly quarters of the science-tech establishment, i.e. the "fail better" motto of Silicon Valley. But I suspect that this is different from what you are getting at.
Hmm... I don't know what the "science-tech fail better" is about, but in my view it is not necessary to romanticize failure. It is sufficient not to stigmatize it. Something that, unfortunately, our educational environment does.
Important piece! Looking forward to Part 2.
I would say that failure has also be romanticized in certainly quarters of the science-tech establishment, i.e. the "fail better" motto of Silicon Valley. But I suspect that this is different from what you are getting at.
Hmm... I don't know what the "science-tech fail better" is about, but in my view it is not necessary to romanticize failure. It is sufficient not to stigmatize it. Something that, unfortunately, our educational environment does.