Thesis: 'methodological crisis' in science is NOT the sudden realisation of a problem. It is a well characterised problem which benefited hugely in recognition by a change in how scientists communicate and collaborate. Central issues were outlined clearly before 1970.

Sterling, 1959. Publication bias, the file drawer problem, and the cult of significance.
Cohen, 1962. Social scientific studies are, in general, substantially underpowered.
Forscher, 1963. The pursuit of publication rather than the pursuit of reliable results.
Platt, 1964. Topic-hopping, weak theory, and the role of induction over time.
Meehl, 1967. The role of the 'cute', surprising, or counter-intuitive results as an eventual outcome for capitalizing on chance.
Lykken, 1968. The weakness of statistical significance in isolation, the need for replication, the central importance of methods, and a whole lot more.
Does all of the above form a coherent body of work that people read at the time? No idea. Probably not.

But - these papers do address, straightforwardly and in better prose than we're allowed to write now, the heart of issues that a lot of people feel blindsided by at present.
And they were written half a century ago.
Big props to @BrentWRoberts and @profsimons (and presumably other @improvingpsych people) for mugging up a list of papers on this topic that helped me fill the fairly substantial gaps in my knowledge on this.

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I’m torn on how to approach the idea of luck. I’m the first to admit that I am one of the luckiest people on the planet. To be born into a prosperous American family in 1960 with smart parents is to start life on third base. The odds against my very existence are astronomical.


I’ve always felt that the luckiest people I know had a talent for recognizing circumstances, not of their own making, that were conducive to a favorable outcome and their ability to quickly take advantage of them.

In other words, dumb luck was just that, it required no awareness on the person’s part, whereas “smart” luck involved awareness followed by action before the circumstances changed.

So, was I “lucky” to be born when I was—nothing I had any control over—and that I came of age just as huge databases and computers were advancing to the point where I could use those tools to write “What Works on Wall Street?” Absolutely.

Was I lucky to start my stock market investments near the peak of interest rates which allowed me to spend the majority of my adult life in a falling rate environment? Yup.