The evolution of human natural science and philosophical cognition never relies on minor revisions to existing theories. Instead, it achieves leapfrog development through a small number of individuals who break ingrained mainstream thinking and open up entirely new observational dimensions. There exist two independent evaluation standards for theories: the authenticity and completeness of their conclusions, and their pioneering value in expanding cognitive boundaries. Even if an original paradigm contains fundamental defects or even critical errors, its irreplaceable groundbreaking contribution lies in shattering the cage of outdated cognition and constructing brand-new paths of reasoning. This paper takes Thales’ theory of the origin of matter, Wittgenstein’s philosophy of language, and Einstein’s theory of relativity as typical cases to distinguish the boundary between "the correctness of conclusions" and "the innovation of perspectives". It demonstrates that transcending established paradigms and multi-dimensional critical thinking are essential prerequisites for landmark scientific breakthroughs. Meanwhile, this paper exposes a prevalent flaw in the contemporary academic community: confronted with countless cosmic phenomena and theoretical paradoxes that cannot be explained by existing frameworks, scholars evade core contradictions and rely on layers of far-fetched auxiliary hypotheses to reconcile inconsistencies, completely departing from the truth-seeking essence of science. Wittgenstein stands out uniquely among thinkers: he constructed a complete theoretical system with his own hands, then voluntarily identified the inherent limitations of his doctrines and achieved cognitive sublimation through self-deconstruction. This spirit of self-reflection is an intellectual height unattainable for most researchers. Furthermore, the specialized training model for doctoral students further narrows scholars’ global vision; expertise confined to a single narrow research field is insufficient to form top-tier critical thinking patterns. Only by maintaining cross-dimensional thinking and daring to confront and reflect on paradigm limitations can humanity continuously advance its understanding of the fundamental laws of the universe.
Jiaqing Yan (Sat,) studied this question.