Why Assume the Inventor Is the Tool’s Best User?
Why Assume the Inventor Is the Tool’s Best User? Making the thing and knowing how to work with it are not the same kind of intelligence. Framing the Question Why assume the inventor is the tool’s best user? It is a tempting shortcut because invention looks like authority. The person who built the thing must understand it better than anyone else, right? Sometimes yes. But often, inventing a tool and mastering its use require different relationships with reality. The inventor knows what the tool was designed to do. The best user learns what the tool actually does when the work gets messy. Origin Is Not Mastery The direct answer is: we assume the inventor is the best user because we confuse origin with mastery. The inventor has origin knowledge. They know the intention, structure, constraints, and imagined use case. That matters. But the best user has field knowledge. They know timing, context, exceptions, pressure, workarounds, and consequences. Those are not the same. A person can desig...