Personal Investment Welcome! You are encouraged to register with the site and login (for free). When you register, you support the site and your question history is saved.Investment by a scientist in an established theory, especially because it has helped to attribute unobservable causes to phenomena, makes it likely to overlook gaps in the observable data or justify them too readily. Investment by a scientist in an established theory, especially because it has helped to attribute unobservable causes to phenomena, makes it likely to overlook gaps in the observable data or justify them too readily. A scientist who is invested in an established theory, especially because it has helped to attribute unobservable causes to phenomena, makes overlooking gaps in the observable data or justifying them too readily likely when they do occur. A scientist who is invested in an established theory is likely to overlook or justify too readily a gap in the observable data when it does appear, especially because it has helped to attribute unobservable causes to phenomena. Scientists' being invested in an established theory, especially because it has helped to attribute unobservable causes to phenomena, makes them likely to overlook gaps in the observable data or justifying them too readily when they do appear. Being invested in an established theory, especially one that has helped to attribute unobservable causes to phenomena, is likely to make scientists overlook gaps in the observable data or justify them too readily. Review Answer