By sheer chance, I stumbled on the following snippet from the game theorist Ariel Rubinstein, which is posted (for some reason) as an abstract in PhilPapers:
Let me start with what you should not do. Do not attend too many seminars in your own field. Otherwise you may simply end up adding a comment to the existing literature, which is mostly made up of comments on previous comments which were themselves only marginal comments. If you want a good idea, look at the world around you or take courses in other disciplines. Some of the papers in my own dissertation (like my 1979 paper on a principal-agent problem with moral hazard and an infinite horizon) were thought of while daydreaming in some law courses I took.
This strikes me as sage advice. What do others think?
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