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N-Ray "The Yes Man"
⚠️ Modern Errors & Frauds

N-Ray "The Yes Man"

N線 イエスマン

The phantom of confirmation bias who shows you what you want to see

📖 Overview

A 20-something sycophantic yes-man. Innocently shows people the illusions they want to see. "Discovered" by French physicist Blondlot, but exposed when Robert Wood secretly removed apparatus parts and experimenters still claimed to "see" the rays.

🗓 Period of Existence

Proposed1903年Debunked1904年

"Discovered" by Prosper-René Blondlot. Denied within a year by Robert Wood's clever verification.

Debunk Event

Exposed by blinded experimental test

Double Blind Exposure
Key Figuresロバート・ウッド

Scientific Explanation

Wood visited Blondlot's lab and secretly removed the aluminum prism (the part supposed to refract N-rays). Blondlot still claimed to "see N-rays," exposing the observation as entirely subjective.

💡 Lesson

Humans "see what they want to see." The danger of subjective observation and the absolute necessity of independent replication.

👥 Character Profile

Apparent Age
20代
Archetype
忖度イエスマン
CatchphraseYes! I can see it! Absolutely!

Rivalries

Aluminum KarunoEquipment Component

The "aluminum prism" that supposedly refracts N-rays was key evidence. Claiming to see rays without it was fatal.

Quotes

はい!見えます!もちろん見えますとも!(見えてない)
あなたが見たいものを、私は見せてあげられます
装置の部品が抜かれてた?…え?でも見えましたよね?
確証バイアスは友達です!
お客様は常に正しい!科学者もお客様!

💬 Event Dialogues

Entrance

Yes! This diagnosis result is perfect! Absolutely! (hasn't looked at anything)

...Huh? Show evidence? Um... if you believe it, isn't that the truth?

Interactions

Aluminum

N-Ray: "Aluminum! Your prism refracts my N-rays! Look!"

Aluminum: "...Let me remove the prism."

N-Ray: "Yes! I can still see them! Absolutely!"

Aluminum: "...That's called 'confirmation bias.' Without the prism, no refraction occurs."

N-Ray: "B-but... everyone said they could see them..."

Aluminum: "'Everyone says so' is not scientific evidence. Only data speaks."

Exit

It's not correct because "everyone said they could see it." It's correct because "anyone gets the same result."

Confirmation bias lurks in every human brain. Thinking "I alone won't be fooled" is itself the greatest confirmation bias.